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Attention 

The Research Libraries regret 
that the physical condition of this 
volume precludes quick copying 
or copying by any other method 
that might damage the original. 



The New York 
Public Library 

ASTOR. LENOX ANO TILDCN FOUNDATIONS 

78 



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STUDIES 



IN THE HISTORY OF THE 



RENAISSANCE 



STUDIES y^^:0^ ^' 



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IN THE HISTORY Ol ' ^:ttE~^ 




EENAISSANCE 



BY 



WALTER H. PATER 

\ 

TILLOW OF BBASBNOSB OOLLEGB, OXFOBD 



MACMILLAN AND CO. 



1873 
[AU rights reserved ] 






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AbT.fK. LENHX AND 
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CONTENTS. ' 



PAOB 

AUCASSIN AND NICOLETTB 1 

PICO BELLA MIRANDULA 18 

SANDRO BOTTICELLI 89 

LUCA BELLA ROBBIA 58 

THE POETRY OF MICHELANGELO 68 

LIONARDO DA VINCI ....... 91 

JOACHIM DU BELLAY 128 

WINCKELMANN 147 

CONCLUSION 207 



•^ 



TO 



C. L. S, 



1 

1 



i 



PREFACE. 



Many attempts have been made by writers on 
art and poetry to define beauty in the abstract, to 
express it in the most general terms, to find a uni- 
versal formula for it. The value of such attempts 
has most often been in the suggestive and pene- 
trating things said by the way. Such discussions 
help us very little to enjoy what has been well 
done in art or poetry, to discriminate between what 
is more and what is less excellent in them, or to 
use words like beauty, excellence, art, poetry, with 
more meaning than they would otherwise have. 
Beauty, like all other qualities presented to human 
experience, is relative ; and the definition of it ^ 
becomes unmeaning and useless in proportion to 
its abstractness. To define beauty not in the most 
abstract, but in the most concrete terms possible, 
not to find a universal formula for it, but the for- 
mula which expresses most adequately this or that 
special manifestation of it, is the aim of the true 
student of sBsthetics. 



viii PREFACE. 

'To see the object as in itself it really is/ has 
been justly said to be the aim of all true criticism 
whatever.; and in aesthetic criticism the first step 
towards seeing one's object as it really is, is to know 
one's own impression as it really is, to discriminate 
it, to realise it distinctly. The objects with which 
aesthetic criticism deals, music, poetry, artistic and 
accomplished forms of human life, are indeed recep- 
tacles of so many powers or forces; they possess, 
like natural elements, so many virtues or qualities. 
What is this song or picture, this engaging per- 
sonality presented in life or in a book, to me ? What 
efiect does it really produce on me ? Does it give 
me pleasure ? and if so, what sort or degree of plea- 
sure? How is my nature modified by its presence 
and under its influence? The answers to these 
questions are the original facts with which the 
aesthetic critic has to do ; and, as in the study of 
light, of morals, of number, one must realise such 
primary data for oneself or not at all. And he who 
experiences these impressions strongly, and drives 
directly at the analysis and discrimination of them, 
need not trouble himself with the abstract question 
what beauty is in itself, or its exact relation to 
truth or experience, — metaphysical questions, as un- 
profitable as metaphysical questions elsewhere. He 
may pass them all by as being, answerable or not, 
of no interest to him. 

The aesthetic critic, then, regards all the objects 



PREFACE. ix 

with which he has to do, all works of art and the 
fairer forms of nature and human life, as powers or 
forces, producing pleasurable sensations, each of a 
more or less peculiar and unique kind. This influ- 
ence he feels and wishes to explain, analysing it, 
and reducing it to its elementa To him, the picture, 
the landscape, the engaging personality in life or 
in a book, La Gioconda, the hills of Carrara, Pico 
of Mirandula, are valuable for their virtues, as we 
say in speaking of a herb, a wine, a gem ; for the 
property each haa of affecting one with a special, 
unique impression of pleasure. Education grows 
in proportion as one's susceptibiHty to these im- 
pressions increases in depth and variety. And the 
function of the aesthetic critic is to distinguish, 
analyse, and separate from its adjuncts, the virtue 
by which a picture, a landscape, a fair personality 
in Hfe or in a book, produces this special impres- a 
sion of beauty or pleasure, to indicate what the 
source of that impression is, and under what con- 
ditions it is experienced. His end is reached when 
he has disengaged that virtue, and noted it, as a 
chemist notes some natural element, for himself 
and others ; and the rule for those who would 
reach this end is stated with great exactness in 
the words of a recent critic of Sainte-Beuve : * De 
se bomer k connaltre de pr^s les belles choses, et 
^ s'en nourrir en exquis amateurs, en humanistes 
accomplis.' 



X PREFACE. 

What is important, then, is not that the critic 
should possess a correct abstract definition of beauty 
for the intellect, but a certain kind of tempera- 
ment, the power of being deeply moved by the 
presence of beautiful objects. He wiU remember 
always that beauty exists in many forms. To him 
all periods, types, schools of taste, are in themselves 
equal. In all ages there have been some excellent 
workmen and some excellent work done. The ques- 
tion he asks is always. In whom did the stir, the 
genius, the sentiment of the period find itself ? who 
was the receptacle of its refinement, its elevation, 
its taste? *The ages are all equal,' says William 
Blake, 'but genius is always above its age.' 

Often it will require great nicety to disengage 
this virtue from the commoner elements with which 
it may be found in combination. Few artists, not 
Goethe or Byron even, work quite cleanly, casting 
off all debris, and leaving us only what the heat 
of their imagination has wholly fused and trans- 
formed. Take for instance the writings of Words- 
worth. The heat of his genius, entering into the 
substance of his work, has crystallised a part, but 
>. only a part, of it ; and in that great mass of verse 
there is much which might well be forgotten. But 
scattered up and down it, sometimes fusing and 
transforming entire compositions, like the Stanzas 
on * Resolution and Independence' and the Ode on 
the * Recollections of Childhood,' sometimes, as if at 



PREFACE. xi 

random, turning a fine crystal here and there, in a 
matter it does not wholly search through and trans- 
form, we trace the action of his unique incom- 
mimicable faculty, that strange mystical sense of a 
life in natural things, and of man's life as a part of 
nature, drawing strength and colour and character 
from local influences, from the hills and streams 
and natural sights and sounds. WeU! that is the 
virtue^ the active principle in Wordsworth's poetry ; 
and then the function of the critic of Wordsworth 
is to trace that active principle, to disengage it, to 
mark the degree in which it penetrates his verse. 

The subjects of the following studies are taken 
from the history of the Renaissance, and touch what 
I think the chief points in that complex, many- 
sided movement. I have explained in the first of 
them what I understand by the word, giving it a 
much wider scope than was intended by those who 
originally used it to denote only that revival of 
classical antiquity in the fifteenth century which 
was but one of many results of a general stimulus 
^ edighteni.^ of L humn n>M. .»d of which 
the g2 ain,ld achievement, of what, aa Ch™- 
tian art, is often falsely opposed to the Renaissance, 
were another result. This outbreak of the human 
spirit may be traced far into the middle age itself, 
with its qualities already clearly pronounced, the 
care for physical beauty, the worship of the body. 



xii PREFACE. 

the breaking down of those limits which the reli- 
gious system of the middle age imposed on the 
heart and the imagination. I have taken as an 
example of this movement, this earlier Renaissance 
within the middle age itself, and as an expression 
of its qualities, a little composition in early French ; 
not because it is the best possible expression of 
them, but because it helps the unity of my series, 
inasmuch as the Renaissance ends also in France, 
in French poetry, in a phase of which the writ- 
ings of Joachim du Bellay are in many ways the 
most perfect illustration ; the Renaissance thus 
putting forth in France an aftermath, a wonder- 
ful later growth, the products of which have to 
the full the subtle and delicate sweetness which 
belong to a refined and comely decadence; just as 
its earliest phases have the freshness which be- 
longs to all periods of growth in art, the charm of 
ascesiSy of the austere and serious girding of the 
loins in youth. 

But it is in Italy, in the fifteenth century, that 
the interest of the Renaissance mainly Ues, in that 
solemn fifteenth century which can hardly be studied 
too much, not merely for its positive results in the 
things of the intellect and the imagination, its con- 
crete works of art, its special and prominent per- 
sonalities, with their profound aesthetic charm, but 
for its general spirit and character, for the ethical 
qualities of which it is a consummate type. 



PREFACE. xiii 

The various forms of intellectual activity which 
together make up the culture of an age, move for 
the most part from different starting points and by 
unconnected roads. As products of the same gene- 
ration they partake indeed of a common character 
and unconsciously illustrate each other; but of the 
producers themselves, each group is solitary, gaining 
what advantage or disadvantage there may be in 
intellectual isolation. Art and poetry, philosophy 
and the religious life, and that other Ufe of refined 
pleasure and action in the open places of the world, 
are each of them confined to its own circle of ideas, 
and those who prosecute either of them are gener- 
ally little curious of the thoughts of others. There 
come however from time to time eras of more 
favourable conditions, in which the thoughts of men 
draw nearer together than is their wont, and the 
many interests of the intellectual world combine 
in one complete type of general culture. The 
fifteenth centiury in Italy is one of these happier 
eras ; and what is sometimes said of the age of 
Pericles is true of that of Lorenzo — it is an age 
productive in personalities, many-sided, centralised, 
complete. Here, artists and philosophers and those 
whom the action of the world has elevated and 
made keen, do not live in isolation, but breathe a 
common air and catch light and heat from each 
other's thoughts. There is a spirit of general ele- 
vation and enlightenment in which aU alike com- ' 



xiv PREFACE. 

municate. It is the unity of ttis spirit which gives 
unity to all the various products of the Eenaissance, 
and it is to this intimate alliance with mind, this 
participation in the best thoughts which that age 
produced, that the art of Italy in the fifteenth 
century owes much of its grave dignity and influ- 
ence. 

I have added an essay on Winckehnann, as no 
incongruous with the studies which precede it, be- 
cause Winckelmann, coming in the eighteenth ^n- 
tury, really belongs in spirit to an earlier age. By 
his enthusiasm for the things of the intellect and 
the imagination for their own sake, by his Hellenism, 
his life-long struggle to attain to the Greek spirit, 
he is in sympathy with the humanists of an earlier 
century. He is the last fruit of the Renaissance, 
and explains in a striking way its motive and 
tendencies. 



AUCASSIN AND NICOLETTE^ 

The history of the Renaissance ends m France 
and carries us away from Italy to the beautifiil 
cities of the country of the Loire. But it was in 
France also, in a very important sense, that the 
Renaissance had begun ; and French writers, who 
are fond of connecting the creations of Italian ge- 
nius with a French origin, who tell us how Saint 
Francis of Assisi took not his name only, but aU 
those notions of chivalry and romantic love which 
so deeply penetrated his thoughts, from a French 
source, how Boccaccio borrowed the outlines of his 
stories from the old French fabliaux^ and how 
Dante himself expressly connects the origin of the 
art of miniature painting with the city of Paris, 
have often dwelt on this notion of a Renaissance 
in the end of the twelfth and beginning of the 
thirteenth century, — a Renaissance within the limits 
of the middle age itself,; a brilliant but in part 

^ Aucassin et Nicolette. See Nouvelles Frangoises du 13® 
sifecle, a Paris, chez P. Jannet, libraire; mdccolvi. 

/ B 






2 THE RENAISSANCE. i. 

abortive effort to do for human life and the human 
mind what was afterwards done in the fifteenth. 
The word Renaissance indeed is now generally used 
to denote not merely that revival of classical an- 
/tiquity which took place in the fifteenth century, 
and to which the word was first applied, but a 
whole complex movement, of which that revival of 
classical antiquity was but one element or symptom. 
For us the Renaissance is the name of a many- 
sided but yet united movement, in which the love 
of the things of the intellect and the imagination 
for their own sake, the desire for a more liberal 
and comely way of conceiving life, make themselves 
felt, prompting those who experience this desire 
to seek first one and then another means of intel- 
lectual or imaginative enjoyment, and directing 
them not merely to the discovery of old and for- 
gotten sources of this enjoyment, but to divine 
new sources of it, new experiences, new subjects of 
poetry, new forms of art. Of this feeling there was 
a great outbreak in the end of the twelfth and 
the beginning of the following century. Here and 
there, imder rare and happy conditions, in Pointed 
architecture, in the doctrines of romantic love, in the 
poetry of Provence, the rude strength of the middle 
age turns to sweetness ; and the taste for sweet- 
ness generated there becomes the seed of the classical 



I. A UCA8SIN AND NICOLETTE. S 

revival in it, prompting it constantly to seek after 
the springs of perfect sweetness in the HeUenic 
world. And coming after a long period in which 
this instinct had been crushed, that true * dark 
age/ in which so many sources of inteUectual and 
imaginative enjoyment had actually disappeared, 
this outbreak is rightly called a Renaissance, a 
revival 

Theories which bring into connection with each 
other modes of thought and feeling, periods of taste, 
forms of art and poetry, which the narrowness of 
men s minds constantly tends to oppose to each 
other, have a great stimulus for the intellect and 
are almost always worth understanding. It is so 
with this theory of a Renaissance within the mid- 
dle age, which seeks to establish a continuity be- 
tween the most characteristic work of the middle 
age, the sculpture of Chartres and the windows of 
Lemans, and the work of the later Renaissance, the 
work of Jean Cousin and Germain Pilon, and thus 
heals that rupture between the middle age and the 
Renaissance which has so often been exaggerated. 
But it is not so much the ecclesiastical art of the 
middle age, its sculpture and painting, — ^work cer- 
tainly done in a great measure for pleasure's sake, 
in which even a secular, a rebellious spirit often 
betrays itself, — but rather the profane poetry of 

B 2 



4 THE RENAISSANCE. i. 

the middle age, the poetry of Provence, and the 
magnificent aftergrowth of that poetry in Italy and 
France, which those French writers have in view 
when they speak of this Renaissance within the 
middle age. In that poetry, earthly passion, in its 
intimacy, its freedom, its variety — the liberty of 
the heart — makes itself felt ; and the name of Abe- 
lard, the great clerk and the great lover, connects 
the expression of this liberty of heart with the free 
play of human intelligence round all subjects pre- 
sented to it, with the Hberty of the intellect, as 
that age understood it. Every one knows the le- 
gend of Abelard, that legend hardly less passionate, 
certainly not less characteristic of the middle age, 
than the legend of Tannhauser ; how the famous 
and comely clerk, in whom Wisdom herself, self- 
possessed, pleasant, and discreet, seemed to sit en- 
throned, came to live in the house of a canon of 
the church of Notre-Dame, where dwelt a girl 
Heloise, beUeved to be his orphan niece, his 
love for whom he had testified by giving her an 
education then unrivalled, so that rumour even 
asserted that, through the knowledge of languages, 
enabling her to penetrate into the mysteries of the 
older world, she had become a sorceress, like the 
Celtic druidesses ; and how as they sat together in 
that shadowy home, to refine a little further on 



I, AUCASSIN AND NICOLETTE. 5 

the nature of abstract ideas, * Love made himself 
of the party with them/ You conceive the tempta- 
tions of the scholar in that dreamy tranquillity, 
who, amid the bright and busy spectacle of * the 
Island,' lived in a world of something like shadows ; 
and how for one who knew so well to assign its 
exact value to every abstract idea, those restraints 
which lie on the consciences of other men had been 
relaxed. It appears that he composed many verses 
in the vulgar tongue ; already the young men sang 
them on the quay below the house. Those songs, 
says M. de Remusat, were probably in the taste 
of the Trouvferes, of whom he was one of the first 
in date,, or, so to speak, the predecessor ; it is the 
same spirit which has moulded the famous * letters ' 
written in the quaint Latin of the middle age. 
At the foot of that early Gothic tower, which the 
next generation raised to grace the precincts of 
Abelard's school on the * mountain ' of Saint Gene- 
vieve, the historian Michelet sees in thought * a 
terrible assembly ; not the hearers of Abelard alone, 
fifty bishops, twenty cardinals, two popes, the whole 
body of scholastic philosophy : not only the learned 
H^loise, the teaching of languages and the Renais- 
sance ; but Arnold of Brescia, — that is to say, the 
revolution.' 

And so firom the rooms of that shadowy house 



6 THE RENAISSANCE. i. 

by the Seine side we see that spirit going abroad, 
with its qualities akeady well-defined, its intimacy, 
its languid sweetness, its rebellion, its subtle skill 
in dividing the elements of human passion, its care 
for physical beauty, its worship of the body ; which 
penetrated the early literature of Italy and finds 
an echo in Dante. 

The central love-poetry of Provence, the poetry 
of the Tenson and the Auhade, of Bernard de Ven- 
tadour and Pierre Vidal, is poetry for the few, for 
the elect and pecuUar people of the kingdom of 
sentiment. But below this intenser poetry there 
was probably a wide range of literature, less seri- 
" ous and elevated, reaching, by Hghtness of form and 
comparative homeliness of interest, an audience 
which the concentrated passion of those higher 
lyrics left untouched. This literature has long since 
perished, or lives only in later French or Italian 
versions. One such version, the only representa- 
tive of its species, M. Fauriel thought he detected 
in the story of Aucassin and NicoUtte, written in 
the French of the latter half of the thirteenth cen- 
tury, and preserved in a unique manuscript in the 
national library of Paris ; and there were reasons 
which made him divine for it a still more ancient 
ancestry, traces in it of an Arabian origin, as in a 
leaf lost out of some early Arabian Nights. The 



I. AUCA8SIN AND NICOLE TTE, 7 

little book loses none of its interest by the criti- 
cism which finds in it only a traditional subject, 
handed on from one people to another ; for after 
passing thus from hand to hand, its outline is still 
clear and its surface untarnished ; and, like many 
other stories, books, literary and artistic conceptions 
of the middle age, it has come to have in this way 
a sort of personal history almost as full of risk and 
adventure as that of its own heroes. The writer 
himself calls the piece a cantefable, a tale told in 
prose, but with its incidents and sentiment helped 
forward by songs, inserted at irregular intervals. In 
the junctions of the story itself there are signs 
of roughness and want of skill which make one / 
suspect that the prose was only put together to 
connect a series of songs, — a series of songs so mov- 
ing and attractive that people wished to heighten 
and dignify their efiect by a regular framework 
or setting. Yet the songs themselves are of the 
simplest kind, not rhymed even, but only imper- 
fectly assonant, stanzas of twenty or thirty lines 
apiece, all ending with a similar vowel sound. And 
here, as elsewhere in that early poetry, much of 
the interest is in the spectacle of the formation of 
a new artistic sense. A new music is arising, the 
music of rhymed poetry, and in the songs of Aucas- 
sin and Nicolette, which seem always on the point 



8 THE RENAISSANCE. i. 

of passing into true rhyme, but which halt some- 
how, and can never quite take flight, you see people 
just growing aware of the elements of a new music 
in their possession, and anticipating how pleasant 
such music might become. The piece was probably 
intended to be recited by a company of trained 
performers, many of whom, at least for the lesser 
parts, were probably children. The songs are in- 
troduced by the rubric * Or se cante' — ici on chant e ; 
and each division of prose by the rubric, * Or dient 
et content et fabloient ^ — ici on conte. The musical 
notes of part of the songs have been preserved ; 
and some of the details are so descriptive that they 
suggested to M. Fauriel the notion that the words 
had been accompanied throughout by dramatic ac- 
tion. That mixture of simplicity and refinement 
which he was surprised to find in a composition of 
the thirteenth century is shown sometimes in the 
turn given to some passing expression or remark ; 
thus, *the Count de Garins, was old and frail, his 
time was over : — Li quens Garins de Beaucaire estoit 
vix et finales ; si avoit son tans trespass^.' And then 
all is so reahsed ! One still sees the ancient forest 
of Gastein, with its disused roads grown deep with 
grass, and the place where seven roads meet — ' u a 
forkeut set cemin qui s en vont par le paifs^— we hear 
the lighthearted country people calling each other by 



I. AUCASSIN AND NICOLETTE. 9 

their rustic names, and putting forward as their 
spokesman one among them who is more eloquent 
and ready than the rest — * li un qui plus fu enparles 
des autres'; for the little book has its burlesque too, 
so that one hears the faint far-oflf laughter still. 
Rough as it is, the piece has certainly this 
high quality of poetry that it aims at a purely 
artistic effect. Its subject is a great sorrow, yet it 
claims to be a thing of joy and refreshment, to be 
entertained not for its matter only, but chiefly for its 
manner ; it is * cortois,' it tells us, * et bien assis/ 

For the student of manners and of the old French 
language and literature it has much interest of a 
purely antiquarian order. To say of an ancient liter- 
ary composition that it has an antiquarian interest, 
often means that it has no distinct aesthetic interest for 
the reader of to-day. Antiquarianism, by a purely 
historical effort, by putting its object in perspective 
and setting the reader in a certain point of view from 
which what gave pleasure to the past is pleasurable 
for him also, may often add greatly to the charm we 
receive from ancient literature. But the first con- 
dition of such aid must be a real, direct, aesthetic 
charm in the thing itself; unless it has that charm, 
unless some purely artistic quality went to its 
original making, no merely antiquarian effort can 
ever give it an aesthetic value or make it a proper 



10 THE RENAISSANCE, i. 

object of SBsthetic criticism. These qualities, when 
they exist, it is always pleasant to define, and 
discriminate from the sort of borrowed interest which 
an old play, or an old story, may very likely acquire 
through a true antiquarianism. The story of 
Aucassin and Nicolette has some of these qualities. 
Aucassin, the only son of Count GarrQS of Beaucaire, 
is passionately in love with Nicolette, a beautiful girl 
of unknown parentage, bought of the Saracens, whom 
his father will not permit him to marry. The story 
turns on the adventures of these two lovers until at 
the end of the piece their mutual fidelity is rewarded. 
These adventures are of the simplest sort, adventures 
which seem to be chosen for the happy occasion they 
afford of keeping the eye of the fancy, perhaps the out- 
ward eye, fixed on pleasant objects, a garden, a ruined 
tower, the little hut of flowers which Nicolette con- 
structs in the forest as a token to Aucassin that 
she has passed that way. All the charm of the 
piece is in its details, in a turn of peculiar lightness 
and grace given to the situations and traits of senti- 
ment, especially in its quaint fragments of early 
French prose. 

All through it one feels the influence of that faint 
air of overwrought delicacy, almost of wantonness, 
which was so strong a chai*acteristic of the poetry of 
the Troubadours. The Troubadours themselves were 



I. AVCA8SIN AND NICOLETTE. 11 

often men of great rank ; they wrote for an exclusive 
audience, people of much leisure and great refinement, 
and they came to value a type of personal beauty 
which has in it but little of the influence of the open 
air and sunshine. There is a faint Eastern delicacy 
in the very scenery of the story, the full-blown roses, 
the chamber painted in some mysterious manner 
where Nicolette is imprisoned, the cool brown marble, 
the almost nameless coloin^, the odour of plucked 
grass and flowers. Nicolette herself well becomes this 
scenery, and is the best illustration of the quality I 
mean, the beautiful weird foreign girl whom the • 
shepherds take for a fay, who has the knowledge 
of simples, the healing and beautifying qualities 
of leaves and flowers, whose skilful touch heals 
Aucassin's sprained shoulder, so that he suddenly 
leaps from the ground; the mere sight of whose white 
flesh, as she passed the place where he lay, healed a 
pilgrim stricken with sore disease, so that he rose up 
and returned to his own country. With this girl 
Aucassin is so deeply in love that he forgets all 
knightly duties. At last Nicolette is shut up to get 
her out of his way, and perhaps the prettiest pas- 
sage in the whole piece is the fragment of early prose 
which describes her escape from this place. 

* Aucassin was put in prison, as you have heard, and 
Nicolette remained shut up in her chamber. It was 



12 THE RENAISSANCE, i. 

summer-time, in the month of the May, when the days 
are warm and long and clear, and the nights coy and 
serene. 

*One night Nicolette, lying on her bed, saw the moon 
shine clear through the little window and heard the 
nightingale sing in the garden, and then came the 
memory of Aucassin whom she so much loved. She 
thought of the Count Garins of Beaucaire, who so 
mortally hated her, and to be rid of her might at any 
moment cause her to be burned or drowned. She 
perceived that the old woman who kept her company 
was asleep ; she rose and put on the fairest gown she 
had ; she took the bed-clothes, and other pieces of 
stuff, and knotted them together like a cord as far as 
they would go. Then she tied the end to a pillar of 
the window and let herself slip down quite softly into 
the garden, and passed straight across it to reach the 
town. 

* Her hair was fair, in small curls, her eyes smiling 
and of a greenish-blue colour, her face feat and 
clear, the little lips very red, the teeth small and 
white ; and the daisies which she crushed in passing, 
holding her skirt high behind and before, looked 
dark against her feet ; the girl was so white ! 

* She came to the garden-gate and opened it, and 
walked through the streets of Beaucaire, keeping 
on the dark side of the street to avoid the light of 



I. A UCASSIN AND NICOLETTE, 13 

the moon which shone quietly in the sky. She 
walked as fast as she could until she came to the 
tower where Aucassin was. The tower was set 
about with pillars here and there. She pressed 
herself against one of the pillars, wrapped herself 
close in her mantle, and putting her face to a chink 
of the tower, which was old and ruined, she heard 
Aucassin crying bitterly within, and when she had 
listened a while she began to speak/ 

But scattered up and down through this lighter 
matter, always tinged with humour, and often passing 
into burlesque, which makes up the general substance 
of the piece, there are morsels of a different quality, 
touches of some intenser sentiment, coming it would 
seem from the profound and energetic spirit of the 
Provencal poetry itself, to which the inspiration of 
the book has been referred. Let me gather up these 
morsels of deeper colour, these expressions of the 
ideal intensity of love, the motive which really unites 
together the fragments of the Kttle composition. 
Dante, the perfect flower of that ideal love, has 
recorded how the tyranny of that *Lord of terrible 
aspect ' became actually physical, blinding his senses 
and suspending his bodily forces. In this, Dante is 
but the central expression and type, of experiences 
known well enough to the initiated, in that passionate 



14 THE RENAISSANCE. i. 

age. Aucassin represents this ideal intensity of 
passion — 

'Aucassin, li biax, li blons, 
Li gentix, li amorous; — ^ 

the slim, tall, debonair figure, dansdloriy as the 
singers call him, with curled yeUow hair and eyes of 
vair, who faints with love, as Dante fainted, who 
rides all day through the forest in search of Nicolette, 
while the thorns tear his flesh so that one miofht 
have traced him by the blood upon the grass, and 
who weeps at evening because he has not found her ; 
who has the malady of his love so that he neglects 
all knightly duties. Once he is induced to put him- 
self at the head of his people, that they, seeing him 
before them, might have more heart to defend them- 
selves ; then a song relates how the sweet grave 
figure goes forth to battle in dainty tight- laced 
armour. It is the very image of the Provencal 
love-god, no longer a child but grown to pensive 
youth, as Pierre Vidal met him, riding on a white 
horse, fair as the morning, his vestment embroidered 
with flowers. He rode on through the gates into 
the open plain beyond. But as he went that strong 
malady of his love came upon him, so that the bridle 
fell from his hands ; and like one who sleeps walking, 
he was carried on into the midst of the enemy, and 
heard them talking together how they might most 
conveniently kill him. 



I. AUCASSm AND NIGOLETTE. 15 

One of the strongest characteristics of that out- 
break of the reason and the imagination, of that 
assertion of the liberty of the heart in the middle 
age, which I have termed a mediaeval Eenaissance, 
was its antinomianism, its spirit of rebellion and 
revolt against the moral and religious ideas of the 
age. In their search after the pleasures of the senses 
and the imagination, in their care for beauty, in their 
worship of the body, people were impelled beyond 
the bounds of the primitive Christian ideal; and 
their love became a strange idolatry, a strange rival 
religion. It was the return of that ancient Venus, 
not dead, but only hidden for a time in the caves 
of the Venusberg, of those old pagan gods still 
going to and fro on the earth, under all sorts of 
disguises. The perfection of culture is not rebellion 
but peace ; only when it has realised a deep moral 
stillness has it really reached its end. But 
often on the way to that end there is room for a 
noble antinomianism. This element in the middle 
age, so often ignored by those writers on it, who 
have said so much of the 'Ages of Faith,^ this re- 
bellious and antinomian element, the recognition of 
which has made the delineation of the middle age 
by the writers of the Romantic school in France, 
by Victor Hugo for instance, in * Notre Dame de 
Paris,' so suggestive and exciting, is found alike in 



16 THE RENAISSANCE. i. 

the history of Abelard and the legend of Tannhauser. 
More and more as we come to mark changes, and 
distinctions of temper, in what is often in one all- 
embracing confusion called the middle age, this 
rebellious element, this sinister claim for liberty of 
heart and thought, comes to the surface. The Albi- 
gensian movement, connected so strangely with the 
history of Provencal poetry, is deeply tinged with 
it. A touch of it makes the Franciscan order, with 
its poetry, its mysticism, its illumination, from the 
point of view of religious authority, justly suspect. 
It influences the thoughts of those obscure pro- 
phetical writers, like Joachim of Flora, strange 
dreamers in a world of flowery rhetoric of that 
third and final dispensation of a spirit of freedom, 
in which law has passed away. Of this spirit 
Aucassin and Nicolette contains perhaps the most 
famous expression ; it is the answer Aucassin makes 
when he is threatened with the pains of hell, if he 
makes Nicolette his mistress. 

'En paradis qu'ai-je k faire^l repondit Aucassin. 
Je ne me soucie d'y aller, pourvu qui j'aie seulement 
Nicolette, ma douce mie, qui j^aime tant. Qui va 
en paradis, sinon telles gens, comme je vous dirai 
bien ? Ces vieux pretres y vont, ces vieux boiteux, 

* I quote Fauriel's modernised version, in which he has retained 
however, some archaic colour, quelqv/ea Ug^res teintes (Tarchaisme* 



I.. AUCAS8IN AND NIGOLETTE, 17 

ces vieux manchots, qui jour et nuit se cramponnent 
aux autels, et aux chapelles. Aussi y vont ces 
vieux moines en guenilles, qui marchent nu-pieds 
ou en sandales rapi^cetees, qui meurent de faim, de 
soif et de mesaises. Voilk ceux qui vont en paradis ; 
et avec telles gens n'ai je que faire. Mais en enfer 
je veux bien aller ; car en enfer vont les bona clercs 
et les beaux chevaKers morts en bataOle et en fortes 
guerres, les braves sergents d'armes et les hommes 
de parage. Et avec tons ceux-Bt veux-je bien aller. 
En enfer aussi vont les belles courtoises dames qui, 
avec leurs maris, ont deux amis ou trois. Uor et 
Targent y vont, les beUes fourrures, le vair et le 
gris. Les joueurs de harpe y vont, les jongleurs 
et les rois du monde ; et avec eux tons veux-je 
aUer, pourvu seulement quWec moi j'aie Nicolette, 
ma trfes-douce mie/ 







PICO BELLA MIEANDULA. 

No account of the Renaissance can be complete 
without some notice of the attempt made by certain 
Italian scholars of the fifteenth century to reconcile 
Christianity with the religion of ancient Greece. To 
reconcile forms of sentiment which at first sight seem 
incompatible, to adjust the various products of the 
human mind to each other in one many-sided type 
of intellectual culture, to give the human spirit for 
the heart and imagination to feed upon, as much as 
it could possibly receive, belonged to the generous 
* instincts of that age. An earlier and simpler gene- 
ration had seen in the gods of Greece so many malig- 
nant spirits, the defeated but still living centres of 
the religion of darkness, struggling, not always in 
vain, against the kingdom of light. Little by little, 
as the natural charm of pagan story reasserted itself 
over minds emerging out of barbarism, the religious 
significance which had once belonged to it was lost 
sight of, and it came to be regarded as the subject of 
a purely artistic or poetical treatment. But it was 
inevitable that from time to time minds should arise 



n. PICO BELLA MIRANDULA, 19 

deeply enough impressed by its beauty and power to 
ask themselves whether the religion of Greece was 
indeed a rival of the religion of Christ ; for the older 
gods had rehabilitated themselves, and men's alle- 
giance was divided. And the fifteenth century* was an 
impassioned age, so ardent and serious in its pursuit // 
of art that it consecrated everything with which art 
had to do as a religious object. The restored Greek 
literature had made it familiar, at least in Plato, with 
a style of expression about the earlier gods, which 
had about it much of the warmth and unction of 
a Christian hymn. It was too familiar with such 
language to regard mythology as a mere story ; and 
it was too serious to play with a religion. 

' Let me briefly remind the reader,' says Heine, in 
the ' Gods in Exile,' an essay full of that strange 
blending of sentiment which is characteristic of the 
traditions of the middle age concerning the pagan 
religions, *how the gods of the older world at the time »^ 
of the definite triumph of Christianity, that is, in the 
third century, fell into painful embarrassments which 
greatly resembled certain tragical situations of their 
earlier life. They now found themselves exposed to 
the same troublesome necessities to which they had 
once before been exposed during the primitive ages, 
in that revolutionary epoch when the Titans broke 
out of the custody of Orcus, and piling Pelion on 

C 2 



20 THE RENAISSANCE, n. 

Ossa scaled Olympus. Unfortunate gods ! They had 
then to take flight ignominiously, and hide them- 
selves among us here on earth under all sorts of 
disguises. Most of them betook themselves to 
Egypt, where for greater security they assumed the 
forms of animals, as is generally known. Just in the 
same way they had to take flight again, and seek 
entertainment in remote hiding-places, when those 
iconoclastic zealots, the black brood of monks, broke 
down all the temples, and pursued the gods with fire 
and curses. Many of these unfortunate emigrants, 
entirely deprived of shelter and ambrosia, had now 
to take to vulgar handicrafts as a means of earning 
their bread. In these circumstances many whose 
sacred groves had been confiscated, let themselves 
out for hire as wood-cutters in Germany, and had to 
drink beer instead of nectar. Apollo seems to have 
been content to take service under graziers, and as he 
had once kept the cows of Admetus, so he lived now 
as a shepherd in Lower Austria. Here however, 
having become suspected on account of his beautiful 
singing, he was recognised by a learned monk as 
one of the old pagan gods, and handed over to the 
spiritual tribunal. On the rack he confessed that he 
was the god Apollo ; and before his execution he 
begged that he might be suffered to play once more 
upon the lyre and to sing a song. And he played so 



11. PICO BELLA MIRANDULA. 21 

touchingly, and sang with such magic, and was 
withal so beautiful in form and feature, that aU the 
women wept, and many of them were so deeply 
impressed that they shortly afterwards fell sick. 
And some time afterwards the people wished to drag 
him from the grave again, that a stake might be 
driven through his body, in the belief that he had 
been a vampire, and that the sick women would by 
this means recover. But they found the grave 
empty/ 

The Renaissance of the fifteenth century was 
in many things great rather by what it designed /. ' 
than by what it achieved. Much which it aspired 
to do, and did but imperfectly or mistakenly, was ac- 
complished in what is called the eclaircissement of 
the eighteenth century, or in our own generation, and 
what really belongs to the revival of the fifteenth 
century is but the leading instinct, the curiosity, the 
initiatory idea. It is so with this very question of the 
reconcihation of the religion of antiquity with the 
religion of Christ. A modem scholar occupied by this 
problem might observe that all religions may be re- 
garded as natural products, that at least in their origin, 
their growth, and decay, they have common laws, and 
are not to be isolated from the other movements of 
the human mind in the periods in which they respect- 
ively prevailed; that they arise spontaneously out of 



22 THE RENAISSANCE, ii. 

the human mind, as expressions of the varying phases 
of its sentiment concerning the unseen world ; that 
every intellectual product must be judged from the 
point of view of the age and people in which it was 
produced. He might go on to observe that each has 
contributed something to the development of the 
religious sense, and ranging them as so many stages 
in the gradual education of the human mind, justify 
the existence of each. The basis of the reconciliation 
of the religions of the world would thus be the 
inexhaustible activity and creativeness of the human 
mind itself, in which all religions alike have their 
root, and in which all alike are laid to rest ; just as 
the fancies of childhood and the thoughts of old age 
meet and are reconciled in the experience of an in- 
dividual. Far diflferent was the method followed by 
the scholars of the fifteenth century. They lacked 
the very rudiments of the historic sense, which by 
an imaginative act throws itself back into a world 
unlike one's own, and judges each intellectual pro- 
duct in connection with the age which produced it ; 
they had no idea of development, of the differences 
of ages, of the gradual education of the human race. 
In their attempts to reconcile the religions of the 
world they were thus thrown back on the quicksand 
of allegorical interpretation. The religions of the 
world were to be reconciled, not as successive stages 



> r 



II. PICO BELLA MIRANDULA. 23 

in a gradual development of the religious sense, 
but as subsisting side by side, and substantially 
in agreement with each other. And here the first 
necessity was to misrepresent the language, the con- 
ceptions, the sentiments, it was proposed to compare 
and reconcile. Plato and Homer must be made to d/ 
speak agreeably to Moses. Set side by side, the 
mere surfaces could never unite in any harmony of 
design. Therefore one must go below the surface, 
and bring up the supposed secondary or still more 
remote meaning, that diviner signification held in 
reserve, in recessU' divinius aliquid, latent in some 
stray touch of Homer or figure of speech in the books 
of Moses. 

And yet, as a curiosity of the human mind, a 
* madhouse-cell,^ if you will, into which we may 
peep for a moment and see it at work weaving 
strange fancies, the allegorical interpretation of the 
fifteenth century has its interest. With its strange 
web of imagery, its quaint conceits, its unexpected 
combinations and subtle moralising, it is an element 
in the local colour of a great age. It illustrates also 
the faith of that age in all oracles, its desire to hear 
all voices, its generous belief that nothing which had 
ever interested the human mind could wholly lose 
its vitality. It is the counterpart, though certainly 
the feebler counterpart, of that practical truce and 



/ 



24 THE RENAISSANCE. n. 

reconciliation of the gods of Greece with the Chris- 
tian religion which is seen in the art of the time ; 
and it is for his share in this work, and because his 
own story is a sort of analogue or visible equivalent 
to the expression of this purpose in his writings, 
that something of a general interest still belongs to 
the name of Pico della Mirandula, whose life, written 
by his nephew Francis, seemed worthy, for some 
touch of sweetness in it, to be translated out of the 
original Latin by Sir Thomas More, that great lover 
of Italian culture, among whose works this life of 
Pico, Earl of Mirandula, and a great lord of Italy ^ 
as he calls him, may stiU be read, in its quaint, 
antiquated EngUsh. 

Marsilio Ficino has told us how Pico came to 
Florence. It was the very day — some day probably 
in the year 1482 — on which Ficino had finished his 
famous translation of Plato into Latin, the work to 
which he had been dedicated from childhood by 
Cosmo de^ Medici, in furtherance of his desire to 
resuscitate the knowledge of Plato among his fellow- 
citizens. Florence indeed, as M. Eenan has pointed 
out, had always had an affinity for the mystic and 
dreamy philosophy of Plato, while the colder and 
more practical philosophy of Aristotle had flourished 
in Padua and other cities of the north ; and the 
Florentines, though they knew perhaps very little 



II. PICO BELLA MIRANDULA. 25 

about him, had had the name of the great idealist 
often on their lips. To increase this knowledge 
Cosmo had founded the Platonic academy, with peri- 
odical discussions at the viUa of Careggi. The fall of 
Constantinople in 1453 and the council in 1438 for 
the reconciliation of the Greek and Latin Churches, 
had brought to Florence many a needy Greek scholar. 
And now the work was completed, the door of the 
mystical temple lay open to all who could construe 
Latin, and the scholar rested from his labour ; when 
there was introduced into his study, where a lamp 
burned continually before the bust of Plato, as other 
men burned lamps before their favourite saints, a 
young man fresh from a journey, of feature and 
sha/pe seemly and beauteous, of stature goodly and 
high, of Jlesh tender and soft, his visage lovely and 
fair, his colour white, intermingled with comely reds, 
his eyes grey, and quick of look, his teeth white and 
even, his hair yellow and abundant, and trimmed with 
more than the usual artifice of the time. It is thus 
that Sir Thomas More translates the words of the 
biographer of Pico, who even in outward form and 
appearance seems an image of that inward harmony 
and completeness of which he is so perfect an ex- 
ample. The word mystic has been usually derived 
from a Greek word which signifies to shut^ as if one 
shut one's lips, brooding on what cannot be uttered ; 



26 THE RENAISSANCE. n. 

but the Platonists themselves derive it rather from 
the act of shutting the eyes, that one may see the 
more, inwardly. Perhaps the eyes of the mystic 
Ficino, now long past the midway of life, had come to 
be thus half-closed ; but when a yoimg man not unlike 
the archangel Raphael, as the Florentines of that age 
depicted him in his wonderful walk with Tobit, 
or Mercury as he might have appeared in a painting 
by Sandro Botticelli or Piero di Cosimo, entered 
his chamber, he seems to have thought there was 
something not wholly earthly about him; at least, 
he ever afterwards believed that it was not without 
the cooperation of the stars that the stranger had 
arrived on that day. For it happened that they fell 
into a conversation, deeper and more intimate than 
men usually fall into at first sight. During that 
conversation Ficino formed the design of devoting his 
remaining years to the translation of Plotinus, that 
new Plato in whom the mystical element in the 
Platonic philosophy had been worked out to the 
utmost limit of vision and ecstasy ; and it is in 
dedicating this translation to Lorenzo de' Medici 
that Ficino has recorded these incidents. 

It was after many wanderings, wanderings of the 
intellect as well as physical journeys, that Pico came 
to rest at Florence. He was then about twenty 
years old, having been bom in 1463. He was called 



n. PICO BELLA MIRANDULA. 27 

Giovanni at baptism, Pico, like all his ancestors, from 
Picas, nephew of the Emperor Constantine, from 
whom they claimed to be descended, and Mirandula 
from the place of his birth, a little town afterwards 
part of the dnchy of Modena, of which small territory 
his family had long been the feudal lords. Pico was 
the youngest of the family, and his mother, delight- 
ing in his wonderful memory, sent him at the age of 
fourteen to the famous school of law at Bologna. 
From the first indeed she seems to have had a 
presentiment of his future fame, for with a faith 
in omens characteristic of her time, she beUeved 
that a strange circumstance had happened at the 
time of Picons birth — the appearance of a circular 
flame which suddenly vanished away, on the waU 
of the chamber where she lay. He remained two 
years at Bologna ; and then, with an inexhaustible, 
imrivalled thirst for knowledge, the strange, con- 
fused, uncritical learning of that age, passed through 
the principal schools of Italy and France, pene- 
trating, as he thought, into the secrets of all ancient 
philosophies, and many eastern languages. And with 
this flood of erudition came the generous hope, so 
often disabused, of reconciling the philosophers with 
each other, and all alike with the Church. At last / 
he came to Kome. There, like some knight-errant ' 
of philosophy, he ofiered to defend nine hundred bold 



(5/ 



28 THE RENAISSANCE. ii. 

paradoxes drawn from the most opposite sources, 
against all comers. But the Pontifical Court was 
led to suspect the orthodoxy of some of these pro- 
positions, and even the reading of the book which 
contained them was forbidden by the Pope. It was 
not till 1493 that Pico was finally absolved by a 
brief of Alexander the Sixth. Ten years before that 
date he had arrived at Florence ; an early instance 
of those who, after following the vain hope of an 
impossible reconciliation from system to system, have 
at last fallen back unsatisfied on the simplicities of 
their childhood's belief 

The oration which Pico composed for the opening 
, of this philosophical tournament still remains ; its 
{ / subject is the dignity of human nature, the greatness 
of man. In common with nearly all mediaeval specu- 
lation, much of Pico's writing has this for its drift ; 
and in common also with it, Pico's theory of that 
dignity is founded on a misconception of the place 
in nature both of the earth and of man. For Pico 
the earth is the centre of the universe ; and around 
it, as a fixed and motionless point, the sun and moon 
and stars revolve like diligent servants or ministers. 
And in the midst of all is placed man, nodus et vin- 

r 

J. culum mundiy the bond or copula of the world, and 

; the * interpreter of nature ' : that famous expression 

of Bacon's really belongs to Pico. 'Tritum est in 



11. PICO BELLA MIRANDULA, 29 

scholia/ he says, *esse hominem minorem mundum, 
in quo mixtum ex elementis corpus et spiritus coe- 
lestis et plantarum anima vegetalis et brutorum sensus 
et ratio et angelica mens et Dei eimilitudo conspici- 
tur/ * It is a commonplace of the schools that man 
is a little world, in which we may discern a body 
mingled of earthy elements, and ethereal breath, and 
the vegetable life of plants, and the senses of the 
lower animals, and reason, and the intelligence of 
angels, and a likeness to God! A commonplace of 
the schools ! But perhaps it had some new signifi- 
cance and authority when men heard one like Pico 
reiterate it; and false as its basis was, the theory 
had its use. For this high dignity of man thus 
bringing the dust under his feet into sensible com- 
munion with the thoughts and affections of the angels 
was supposed to belong to him not as renewed by 
a religious system, but by his own natural right; 
and it was a counterpoise to the increasing tendency 
of mediaeval religion to depreciate man's nature, to 
sacrifice this or that element in it, to make it ashamed 
of itself, to keep the degrading or painful accidents 
of it always in view. It helped man onwaf d to that 
reassertion of himself, that rehabilitation of human 
nature, the body, the senses, the heart, the in- 
telligence, which the Eenaissance fulfils. And yet 
to read a page of one of Pico's forgotten books is 



30 THE RENAISSANCE. n. 

like a glance into one of those ancient sepulchres, 
upon which the wanderer in classical lands has 
sometimes stumbled, with the old disused orna- 
ments and furniture of a world wholly unlike ours 
stiU fresh in them. That whole conception of nature 
is so different from our own. For Pico the world 
is a limited place, bounded by actual crystal walls 
and a material firmament ; it is like a painted toy, 
like that map or system of the world held as a 
great target or shield in the hands of the grey- 
headed father of all things, in one of the earUer 
frescoes of the Campo Santo at Pisa. How different 
from this childish dream is our own conception of 
nature, with its unlimited space, its innumerable 
suns, and the earth but a mote in the beam ; how 
different the strange new awe and superstition with 
which it fills our minds! *The silence of those 
infinite spaces,* says Pascal, contemplating a star- 
light night, *the silence of those infinite spaces 
terrifies me.' Le silence Sternel de ces espaces in- 
finis w!effraie. 

He was already almost wearied out when he came 
to Florence. He had loved much and been beloved 
by women, * wandering over the crooked hills of 
delicious pleasure*; but their reign over him was 
over, and long before Savonarola's famous 'bonfire 
of vanities/ he had destroyed those love-songs in 



n. PICO BELLA MIRANDULA. 31 

the vulgar tongue which would have been such 
a relief to us after the scholastic prolixity of his 
Latin writings. It was in another spirit that he 
composed a Platonic commentary, the only work of 
his in Italian which has come down to us, on the 
' Song of Divine Love,' secondo la mente ed opinione 
dei Platoniciy ' according to the mind and opinion 
of the Platonists,* by his friend Hieronymo Beni- 
veni, in which, with an ambitious array of every sort 
of learning, and a profusion of imagery borrowed in- 
differently from the astrologers, the Cabala, and 
Homer, and Scripture, and Dionysius the Areopagite, 
he attempts to define the stages- by which the soul 
passes from the earthly to the unseen beauty. A 
change indeed had passed over him, as if the chill- 
ing touch of that abstract, disembodied beauty 
which the Platonists profess to long for, had already 
touched him ; and perhaps it was a sense of this, 
coupled with that over-brightness of his, which in 
the popular imagination always betokens an early 
death, that made Camilla Rucellai, one of those 
prophetesses whom the preaching of Savonarola had 
raised up in Florence, prophesy, seeing him for the 
first time, that he would depart in the time of lilies — 
prematurely, that is, like the field flowers which 
are withered by the scorching sun almost as soon 
as they have sprung up. It was now that he wrote 



/ 



32 THE RENAISSANCE. ii. 

down those thoughts on the religions life which Sir 
Thomas More turned into EngKsh, and which another 
English translator thought worthy to be added to 
the books of the 'Imitation/ ' It is not hard to know 
God, provided one will not force oneself to define him/ 
has been thought a great sayiug of Joubert's. ' Love 
/ God/ Pico writes to Angelo Politian, 'we rather may, 
than either know him or by speech utter him. And 
yet had men liefer by kijowledge never find that 
which they seek, than by love possess that thing, 
which also without love were in vain found/ 

Yet he who had this fine touch for spiritual things 
did not — and in this is the enduring interest of his 
story — even after his conversion forget the old gods. 
He is one of the last who seriously and sincerely 
entertained the claims on men s faith of the pagan 
religions ; he is anxious to ascertain the true signi- 
ficance of the obscurest legend, the Hghtest tradition 
concerning them. With many thoughts and many 
influences which led him in that direction, he did 
not become a monk, only he became gentle and 
patient in disputation ; retaining * somewhat of the 
old plenty, in dainty viand and silver vessel' he 
gave over the greater part of his property to his 
Mend, the mystical poet Beniveni, to be spent by him 
in works of charity, chiefly in the sweet charity of 
providing marriage-dowries for the peasant girls of 



c 



u. PICO BELLA MIRANDULA. 33 

Florence. His end came in 1494, when, amid the 
prayers and sacraments of Savonarola, he died of 
fever on the very day on which Charles the Eighth 
entered Florence, the seventeenth of November, yet 
in the time of Hlies, the lilies of the shield of 
France, as the people now said, remembering Ca- 
milla's prophecy. He was buried in the cloister at 
Saint Mark^s, in the hood and white frock of the 
Dominican order. 

It is because the life of Pico, thus lying down 
to rest in the Dominican habit, yet amid thoughts 
of the older gods, himself like one of those comely 
divinities, reconciled indeed to the new religion, but 
still with a tenderness for the earlier life, and 
desirous literally to 'bind the ages each to each 
by natural piety * — it is because this life is so perfect 
an analogue to the attempt made in his writings 
to reconcile Christianity with the ideas of Pagan- 
ism, that Pico, in spite of the scholastic character 
of those writings, is really interesting. Thus in 
the * Heptaplus, or Discourse on the Seven Days of 
the Creation,' he endeavours to reconcile the accounts 
which pagan philosophy had given of the origin 
of the world with the account given in the books 
of Moses — the * Timaeus ' of Plato with the book of 
* Genesis.* The * Heptaplus ' is dedicated to Lorenzo 
the Magnificent, whose interest, the preface tells us, 

D 



34 THE RENAISSANCE. n. 

in the secret wisdom of Moses is well known. If 
Moses seems in his writings simple and even popular, 
rather than either a philosopher or a theologian, 
that is because it was an institution with the ancient 
philosophers either not to speak of divine things 
at all, or to speak of them dissemblingly ; hence 
their doctrines were called mysteries. Taught by 
them, Pythagoras became so great a * master of 
silence,' and wrote almost nothing, thus hiding the 
words of God in his heart, and speaking wisdom 
only among the perfect. In explaining the harmony 
between Plato and Moses, Pico lays hold on every 
sort of figure and analogy, on the double meanings 
of words, the symbols of the Jewish ritual, the 
secondary meanings of obscure stories in the later 
Greek mythologists. Everywhere there is an un- 
broken system of analogies. Every object in the 
t/ material world is an analogue, a symbol or counter- 
part of some higher reality in the starry heavens, 
and this again of some law of the angelic life in 
the world beyond the stars. There is the element 
of fire in the material world ; the sun is the fire of 
heaven ; and there is in the super-celestial world 
the fire of the seraphic intelligence. ^But behold 
how they diBferl The elementary fire bums, the 
heavenly fire vivifies, the super-celestial fire loves.' 
In this way every natural object, every combination 



n. PICO BELLA MIRANDULA. 35 

of natural forces, every accident in the lives of 
men, is filled with higher meanings. Omens, pro- 
phecies, supernatural coincidences, accompany Pico 
himself all through life. There are oracles in 
every tree and mountain-top, and a significance in 
every accidental combination of the events of life. 

This constant tendency to symbolism and imagery 
gives Pico's work a figured style by which it has 
some real resemblance to Plato's, and he differs from 
other mystical writers of his time by a real desire 
to know his authorities at first hand. He reads 
Plato in Greek, Moses in Hebrew, and by this his 
work really belongs to the higher culture. Above 
all, there is a constant sense in reading him, that 
his thoughts, however little their positive value 
may be, are connected with springs beneath them 
of deep and passionate emotion ; and when he ex- 
plains the grades or steps by which the soul passes 
from the love of a physical object to the love of 
unseen beauty, and unfolds the analogies between 
this process and other movements upwards of 
human thought, there is a glow and vehemence 
in his words which remind one of the manner in 
which his own brief existence flamed itself away. 

I said that the Renaissance of the fifteenth century 
was in many things great rather by what it de- 
signed or aspired to do than by what it actually 

D 2 



36 THJS RENAISSANCE. n. 

achieved. It remained for a later age to conceive 
the true method of effecting a scientific reconcilia- 
tion of Christian sentiment with the imagery, the 
i legends, the theories about the world, of pagan 
W poetry and philosophy. For that age the only pos- 
sible reconciliation was an imaginative one, and 
resulted from the efforts of artists trained in 
Christian schools to handle pagan subjects; and 
of this artistic reconciliation work like Pico's was 
but the feebler counterpart. Whatever philoso- 
phers had to say on one side or the other, whether 
they were successftJ or not in their attempts to 
reconcile the old to the new, and to justify the 
expenditure of so much care and thought on the 
dreams of a dead religion, the imagery of the Greek 
religion, the direct charm of its story, were by 
artists valued and cultivated for their own sake. 
Hence a new sort of mythology with a tone and 
qualities of its own. When the ship-load of sacred 
earth from the soil of Jerusalem was mingled with 
the common clay in the Campo Santo of Pisa, a new 
flower grew up from it, unlike any flower men had 
seen before, the anemone with its concentric rings of 
strangely blended colour, still to be found by those 
who search long enough for it in the long grass 
of the Maremma. Just such a strange flower was 
that mythology of the Italian Renaissance which 



n. FIGO BELLA MIRANDULA. 37 

grew up from the mixture of two traditions, two 
sentiments, the sacred and the profane. Classical 
story was regarded as a mere datum to be received 
and assimilated. It did not come into men's minds 
to ask curiously of science concerning its origin, 
its prima^ fonn and import, its meaning for those 
who projected it. It sank into their minds to issue 
forth again with all the tangle about it of medi- 
aeval sentiments and ideas. In the Doni Madonna 
in the Tribune of the Uffizii, Michelangelo actually 
brings the pagan religion, and with it the imveiled 
human form, the sleepy-looking fauns of a Dionysiac 
revel, into the presence of the Madonna, as simpler 
painters had introduced other products of the earth, 
birds or flowers, and he has given that Madonna 
herself much of the uncouth energy of the older 
and more primitive mighty Mother. 

It is because this picturesque union of contrasts, 
belonging properly to the art of the close of the 
fifteenth century, pervades in Pico della Mirandula 
an actual person, that the figure of Pico is so 
attractive. He will not let one go; he wins one 
on in spite of oneself to turn again to the pages 
of his forgotten books, although we know already 
that the actual solution proposed in them will satisfy ' 
us as little as perhaps it satisfied him. It is said 
that m bis eagerness for mysterious learning he 



38 THE RENAISSANCE, n. 

once paid a great sum for a collection of cabalis- 
tic manuscripts which turned out to be forgeries ; 
and the story might well stand as a parable of 
all he ever seemed to gain in the way of actual 
knowledge. He had sought knowledge, and passed 
from system to system, and hazarded much ; but 
less for the sake of positive knowledge than because 
he believed there was a spirit of order and beauty 
in knowledge, which would come down and unite 
what men^s ignorance had divided, and renew what 
time had made dim. And so while his actual work 
has passed away, yet his own qualities are still 
active, and he himself remains, as one aUve in the 
grave, caesiis et vigilibus ocviis, as his biographer 
describes him, and with that sanguine clear skin, de- 
centi rubore interspersa, as with the light of morn- 
ing upon it ; and he has a true place in that group 
of great Italians who fill the end of the fifteenth 
century with their names, he is a true humanist. 
For the essence of humanism is that one behef of 
which he seems never to have doubted, that nothing 
which has ever interested living men and women can 
wholly lose its vitality — no language they have 
spoken, nor oracle by which they have hushed their 
voices, no dream which has once been entertained by 
actual human minds, nothing about which they have 
ever been passionate or expended time and zeal. 



SANDEO BOTTICELLI. 

In Lionardo^s treatise on painting only one contem- 
porary is mentioned by name — Sandro Botticelli. 
This pre-eminence may be due to chance only, but 
to some will rather appear a result of deliberate 
judgment ; for people have begun to find out the 
charm of Botticelli^s work, and his name, little 
known in the last century, is quietly becoming im- 
portant. In the middle of the fifteenth century he 
had already anticipated much of that meditative 
subtlety which is sometimes supposed peculiar to 
the great imaginative workmen of its close. Leav- 
ing the simple religion which had occupied the 
followers of Giotto for a century, and the simple 
naturalism which had grown out of it, a thing of 
birds and flowers only, he sought inspiration in what 
to him were works of the modem world, the writings 
of Dante and Boccaccio, and in new readings of his 
own of classical stories ; or if he painted religious 
subjects, painted them with an under-current of 
original sentiment which touches you as the real 
matter of the picture through the veil of its osten- 



40 THE RENAISSANCE. in. 

sible subject. What is the peculiar sensation, what 
is the peculiar quality of pleasure which his work 
has the property of exciting in us, and which we 
cannot get elsewhere? For this, especially when 
he has to speak of a comparatively unknown artist, 
is always the chief question which a critic has. to 
answer. 

In an age when the lives of artists were full of 
adventure, his life is almost colourless. Criticism 
indeed has cleared away much of the gossip which 
Vasari accumulated, has touched the legend of Lippo 
and Lucrezia, and rehabilitated the character of 
Andrea del Castagno ; but in Botticelli's case there 
is no legend to dissipate. He did not even go by 
his true name : Sandro is a nickname, and his true 
name is Filipepi, Botticelli being only the name of 
the goldsmith who first taught him art. Only two 
things happened to him, two things which he shared 
with other artists — he was invited to Rome to paint 
in the Sistine Chapel, and he fell in later life under 
the influence of Savonarola, passing apparently almost 
out of men's sight in a sort of religious melancholy 
which lasted till his death in 151 5, according to the 
received date. Vasari says that he plunged into 
the study of Dante, and even wrote a comment on 
the * Divine Comedy.' But it seems strange that he 
should have lived on inactive so long ; and one 



in. SANDRO BOTTICELLI. 41 

almost wishes that some document might come to 
light which, fixing the date of his death earlier, 
might relieve one, in thinking of him, of his de- 
jected old age. 

He is before all things a poetical painter, blending 
the charm of story and sentiment, the medium of 
the art of poetry, with the charm of line and colour, 
the medium of abstract painting. So he becomes 
the illustrator of Dante. In a few rare examples 
of the edition of 1481, the blank spaces left at the 
beginning of every canto for the hand of the 
illuminator have been filled, as far as the nineteenth 
canto of the * Inferno,^ with impressions of engraved 
plates, seemingly by way of experiment, for in the 
copy in the Bodleian Library, one of the three im- 
pressions it contains has been printed upside down 
and much awry in the midst of the luxurious printed 
page. Giotto, and the followers of Giotto, with 
their almost childish religious aim, had not learned 
to put that weight of meaning into outward things, 
light, colour, every-day gesture, which the poetry 
of the ' Divine Comedy ' involves, and before the 
fifteenth century Dante could hardly have found 
an illustrator. Botticelli's illustrations are crowded 
with incident, blending with a naive carelessness of 
pictorial propriety three phases of the same scene 
into one plate. The grotesques, so often a stum- 



42 THE RENAISSANCE, ni. 

bling-block to painters who forget that the words of 
a poet, which only feebly present an image to the 
mind, must be lowered in key when translated into 
form, make one regret that he has not rather chosen 
for illustration the more subdued imagery of the 
' Purgatorio/ Yet in the scene of those who ' go 
down quick into helF there is an invention about 
the fire taking hold on the up-turned soles of the 
feet, which proves that the design is no mere trans- 
lation of Dante^s words, but a true painter s vision ; 
while the scene of the Centaurs wins one at once, 
for, forgetful of the actual circumstances of their 
appearance, Botticelli has gone off with delight on 
the thought of the Centaurs themselves, bright 
small creatures of the woodland, with arch baby 
faces and mignon forms, drawing tiny bows. 

Botticelli lived in a generation of naturalists, and 
he might have been a mere naturalist among them. 
There are traces enough in his work of that alert 
sense of outward things which, in the pictures of 
that period, fills the lawns with delicate living crea- 
tures, and the hill-sides with pools of water, and the 
pools of water with flowering reeds. But this was 
not enough for him ; he is a visionary painter, and 
in his visionariness he resembles Dante. Giotto, 
the tried companion of Dante, Masaccio, Ghirlan- 
daio even, do but transcribe with more or less 



UL SANDRO BOTTICELLI. 43 

refining the outward image ; they are dramatic, not 
visionary, painters; they are ahnost impassive spec- 
tators of the action before them. But the genius 
of which Botticelli is the type usurps the data be- 
fore it as the exponents of ideas, moods, visions of 
its own ; with this interest it plays fast and loose 
with those data, rejecting some and isolating others, 
and always combining them anew. To him, as to 
Dante, the scene, the colour, the outward image or 
gesture, comes with all its incisive and importu- 
nate reality ; but awakes in him, moreover, by 
some subtle structure of his own, a mood which it 
awakes in no one else, of which it is the double or 
repetition, and which it clothes, that all may share 
it, with sensuous circumstances. 

But he is far enough from accepting the conven- 
tional orthodoxy of Dante which, referring all 
human action to the easy formula of purgatory 
heaven and hell, leaves an insoluble element of 
prose in the depths of Dante's poetry. One pic- 
ture of his, with the portrait of the donor, Matteo 
Palmieri, below, had the credit or discredit of at- 
tracting some shadow of ecclesiastical censure. This 
Matteo Palmieri — ^two dim figures move under that 
name in contemporary history — ^was the reputed 
author of a poem, still unedited, * La Citt^ Divina,' 
which 'represented the human ra<3e as an incarnation 



44 THE RENAISSANCE. in. 

of those angels who, in the revolt of Lucifer, were 
neither for God nor for his enemies, a fantasy of 
that earlier Alexandrian philosophy, about which 
the Florentine intellect in that century was so 
curious. Botticelli's picture may have been only 
one of those familiar compositions in which re- 
ligious reverie has recorded its impressions of the 
various forms of beatified existence — Glorias^ as 
they were called, like that in which Giotto painted 
the portrait of Dante ; but somehow it was suspected 
of embodying in a picture the wayward dream of 
Palmieri, and the chapel where it hung was closed. 
Artists so entire as Botticelli are usually careless 
about philosophical theories, even when the philo- 
sopher is a Florentine of the fifteenth century, and 
his work a poem in terza rima. But Botticelli, who 
wrote a commentary on Dante and became the dis- 
ciple of Savonarola, may well have let such theories 
come and go across him. True or false, the story 
interprets much of the pecuUar sentiment with 
which he infuses his profane and sacred persons, 
comely, and in a certain sense like angels, but with 
a sense of displacement or loss about them — the 
wistfulness of exiles conscious of a passion and 
energy greater than any known issue of them ex- 
plains, which runs through all his varied work 
with a sentiment of ineffitble melancholy. 



ra. SANDRO BOTTICELLI, 46 

So just what Dante scorns as unworthy alike of 
heaven and hell, Botticelli accepts, that middle 
world in which men take no side in great conflicts, 
and decide no great causes, and make great re- 
fusals. He thus sets for himself the limits within 
which art, undisturbed by any moral ambition, does 
its most sincere and surest work. His interest is 
neither in the untempered goodness of Angelico^s 
saints, nor the untempered evil of Orcagna's ' In- 
ferno'; but with men and women, in their mixed 
and uncertain condition, always attractive, clothed 
sometimes by passion with a character of loveliness 
and energy, but saddened perpetually by the shadow 
upon them of the great things from which they 
shrink. His morality is all sympathy ; and it is 
this sympathy, conveying into his work somewhat 
more than is usual of the true complexion of 
humanity, which makes him, visionary as he is, so 
forcible a realist. 

It is this which gives to his Madonnas their 
unique expression and charm. He has worked 
out in them a distinct and peculiar type, definite 
enough in his own mind, for he has painted it 
over and over again, sometimes one might think 
almost mechanically, as a pastime during that dark 
period when his thoughts were so heavy upon 
him. Hardly any collection of note is without 



46 THE RENAISSANCE. in. 

one of these circular pictures, into which the at- 
tendant angek depress their heads so naively. 
Perhaps you have sometimes wondered why those 
peevish -looking Madonnas, conformed to no ac- 
knowledged or obvious type of beauty, attract you 
more and more, and often come back to you when 
the Sistine Madonna and the virgins of Fra Angelico 
are forgotten. At first, contrasting them with those, 
you may have thought that there was even some- 
thing in them mean or abject, for the abstract 
lines of the face have little nobleness, and the 
colour is wan. For with Botticelli she too, though 
she holds in her hands the ' Desire of all nations,* 
is one of those who are neither for God nor for 
his enemies ; and her choice is on her face. The 
white light on it is cast up hard and cheerless from 
below, as when snow lies upon the ground, and 
the children look up with surprise at the strange 
whiteness of the ceiling. Her trouble is in the 
very caress of the mysterious child, whose gaze is 
always far from her, and who has already that 
sweet look of devotion which men have never been 
able altogether to love, and which still makes the 
bom saint an object almost of suspicion to his 
earthly brethren. Once, indeed, he guides her 
hand to transcribe in a book the words of her 
exaltation, the Ave^ and the Magnificat^ and the 



t 



in. SANDRO BOTTICELLI. 47 

Gavde Maria^ and the yotmg angels, glad to rouse 
her for a moment from her dejection, are eager 
to hold the inkhom and support the book ; but 
the pen almost drops from her hand, and the high 
cold words have no meaning for her, and her true 
children are those others, in the midst of whom, 
in her rude home, the intolerable honour came to 
her, with that look of wistful inquiry on their 
irregular faces which you see in startled animals — 
gipsy children, such as those who, in Apennine 
villages, still hold out their long brown arms to beg 
of you, but on Sundays become enfants du chceur, 
with their thick black hair nicely combed and fair 
white linen on their sun-burnt throats. 

What is strangest is that he carries this sentiment 
into classical subjects, its most complete expression 
being a picture in the Uflfizii, of Venus rising from 
the sea, in which the grotesque emblems of the 
middle age, and a landscape fuU of its peculiar 
feeling, and even its strange draperies powdered all 
over in the Gothic manner with a quaint conceit of 
daisies, frame a figure that reminds you of the fault- 
less nude studies of Ingres. At first, perhaps, you 
are attracted only by a quaintness of design, which 
seems to recall all at once whatever you have read 
of Florence in the fifteenth century ; afterwards 
you may think that this quaintness must be in- 



J% 



48 TffJS RENAISSANCE, m. 

congruous with the subject, and that the colour is 
cadaverous, or at least cold. And yet the more 
you come to understand what imaginative colour- 
ing really is, that aU colour is no mere deUghtful 
quality of natural things, but a spirit upon them 
by which they become expressive to the spirit, the 
better you will like this pecuUar quality of colour ; 
and you will find that quaint design of Botticelli's 
a more direct inlet into the Greek temper than 
the works of the Greeks themselves even of the 
finest period. Of the Greeks as they really were, 
of their difference from ourselves, of the aspects of 
their outward life, we know far more than Botti- 
celli, or his most learned contemporaries ; but for 
us, long familiarity has taken off the edge of the 
lesson, and we are hardly conscious of what we 
owe to the Hellenic spirit. But in pictures like 
this of Botticelli's you have a record of the first 
impression made by it on minds turned back to- 
wards it in almost painful aspiration from a world 
in which it had been ignored so long; and in the 
passion, the energy, the industry of realisation, with 
which Botticelli carries out his intention, is the 
exact measure of the legitimate influence over the 
human mind of the imaginative system of which 
this is the central myth. The light is, indeed, cold 
— mere sunless dawn ; but a later painter would 






IH. SANDRO BOTTICELLL 49 

have cloyed you with sunshine ; and you can see 

the better for that quietness in the morning air 

each long promontory as it slopes down to the 

water's edge. Men go forth to their labours until 

the evening ; but she is awake before them, and 

you might think that the sorrow in her face was 

at the thought of the whole long day of love yet 

to come. An emblematical figure of the wind blows 

hard across the grey water, moving forward the 

daiaty-lipped shell on which she sails, the sea 

* showing his teeth' as it moves in thin lines of 

foam, and sucking in one by one the falling 

roses, each severe in outline, plucked off short at 

the stalk, but embrowned a little, as Botticelli's 

flowers always are. Botticelli meant all that 

imagery to be altogether pleasurable; and it was 

partly an iacompleteness of resources, inseparable 

from the art of that time, that subdued and chilled 

it ; but his predilection for minor tones counts also ; 

and what is unmistakeable is the sadness with which 

he has conceived the goddess of pleasure as the 

depositary of a great power over the lives of men. 

I have said that the peculiar character of Botticelli 

I is the result of a blending in him of a sympathy for 

humanity in its uncertain condition, its attractiveness, 

its investiture at rarer moments in a character of 

I loveliness and energy, with his consciousness of the 
j 

/ 
/ 






) 



50 THE RENAISSANCE. m. 

4 
I 

shadow upon it of the great things from which it \ 
shrinks, and that this conveys into his work some- < 
what more than painting usually attains of the true I 
complexion of humanity. He paints the story of the ij 
goddess of pleasure in other episodes besides that 
of her birth from the sea, but never without some 
shadow of death in the grey flesh and wan flowers. 
He paints Madonnas, but they shrink from the 
pressure of the divine child, and plead in unmis- 
takeable undertones for a warmer, lower humanity. 
The same figiu'e — ^tradition connects it with Simonetta, 
the mistress of Giuliano de' Medici — appears again as 
Judith returning home across the hill country when 
the great deed is over, and the moment of revulsion 
come, and the olive branch in her hand is becoming 
a burthen ; as Justice, sitting on a throne, but with 
a fixed look of self-hatred which makes the sword in 
her hand seem that of a suicide ; and again as Veritas 
in the allegorical picture of Calumnia, where one may 
note in passing the suggestiveness of an accident 
which identifies the image of Truth with the person of 
Venus. We might trace the same sentiment through 
his engravings ;, but his share in them is doubtful, 
and the object of this fragment has been attained if 
I have defined aright the temper in which he worked. 
But, after aU, it may be asked, is a painter like 
Botticelli, a second-rate painter, a proper subject for 



m. SANDRO BOTTICELLI. 61 

general criticism? There are a few great painters, 
like Michelangelo or Lionardo, whose work has be- 
come a force in general culture, partly for this very 
reason that they have absorbed into themselves all 
such workmen as Sandro Botticelli; and, over and 
above mere technical or antiquarian criticism, general 
criticism may be v^y well employed in that sort 
of interpretation which adjusts the position of these 
men to gaieral culture, whereas smaller men can be 
the proper subjects only of technical or antiquarian 
treatment. But, besides those great men, there is a 
certain number of artists who have a distinct faculty 

r 

of their own by which they convey to us a peculiar ' 
quality of pleasure which we cannot get elsewhere, 
and these, too, have their place in general culture, 
and have to be interpreted to it by those who have 
felt their charm strongly, and are often the objects 
of a special diligence and a consideration wholly 
affectionate, just because there is not about them 
the stress of a great name and authority. Of this 
select number Botticelli is one ; he has the freshness, 
the uncertain and diffident promise which belongs to 
the earlier Renaissance itself, and makes it perhaps 
the most interesting period in the history of the 
mind ; in studying his work one begins to under- 
stand to how great a place in human culture the 

art of Italy had been called. 

£ 2 



LUCA DELLA EOBBIA. 

The Italian sculptors of the earlier half of the 
fifteenth century are more than mere forerunners of 
the great masters of its close, and often reach 
perfection within the narrow limits which they chose 
to impose on their work. Their sculpture shares 
with the paintings of Botticelli and the churches 
of Brunelleschi that profound expressiveness, that 
intimate impress of an indwelling soul, which is the 
peculiar fescination of the art of Italy in that 
century. Their works have been much neglected 
and often almost hidden away amid the fiippery of 
modem decoration, and we come with some surprise 
on the places where their fire still smoulders. One 
longs to penetrate into the lives of the men who have 
given expression to so much power and sweetness; 
but it is part of the reserve, the austere dignity and 
simplicity of their existence, that their histories are 
for the most part lost or told but briefly : from their 
lives as from their work all tumult of sound and 
colour has passed away. Mino, the Bafiaelle of 
sculpture, Maso del Rodario, whose works add a new 



IV. LVGA BELLA ROBBIA. 63 

grace to the church of Como, Donatello even, — one 
asks in vain for more than a shadowy outline of their 
actual days. 

Something more remains of Luca della Robbia; 
something more of a history of outward changes and 
fortunes is expressed through his work. I suppose 
nothing bruj the real i of a Tn«^ to™ so 
vividly to mind as those pieces of pale blue and white 
porcelain, by which he is best known, like fragments 
of the milky sky itself fallen into the cool streets and 
breaking into the darkened churches. And no work 
is less imitable : like Tuscan wine it loses its savour 
when moved from its birthplace, from the crumbling 
walls where it was first placed. Part of the charm 
of this work, its grace and purity and finish of ex- 
pression, is common to all the Tuscan sculptors of 
the fifteenth century ; for Luca was first of all a 
worker in marble, and his works in terra-cotta only 
transfer to a diflferent material the principles of his 
sculpture. 

These Tuscan sculptors of the fifteenth century 
worked for the most part in low relief, giving even to 
their monumental eflSgies something of its depression 
of surface, getting into them by this means a touching 
suggestion of the wasting and etherealisation of death. 
They are haters of all heaviness and emphasis, of 
strongly opposed light and shade, and look for their 



C 



54 . THE RENAISSANCE. rr. 

• 

means of expression among the last refinements of 
shadow, which are ahnost invisible except in a strong 
light, and which the finest pencil can hardly follow. 
The whole essence of their work is expression, the 
passing of a anile over the face of a child, the 
ripple of the air on a still day over the cmiain of 
a window ajar. 

What is the precise value of this system of sculpture, 
this low relief? Luca della Eobbia, and the other 
sculptors of the school to which he belongs, have 
before them the universal problem of their art ; and 
this system of low relief is the means by which they 
meet and overcome the special limitation of sculp- 
ture, a limitation which results from the essential 
conditions and material of all sculptured work, and 
which consists in the tendency of this work to a 
hard realism^, a one-sided presentment of mere form, 
that solid material firame which only motion can re- 
lieve, a thing of heavy shadows and an individuality 
of expression pushed to caricature. Against this ten- 
dency to that hard presentment of mere form which 
tries vainly to compete with the reality of nature 
itself, all noble sculpture is constantly struggling; 
each great system of sculpture resisting it in its own 
way, etherealising, spiritualising, relieving its hard- 
ness, its heaviness and death. The use of colour 
in sculpture is but an unskilful contrivance to effect 



IV. LUC A BELLA ROBBIA. 55 

by borrowing from another art what the nobler 
sculpture effects by strictly appropriate means. To 
get not colour, but the equivalent of colour, to secure 
the expression and the play of life ; to expand the 
too fixed individuality of pure unrelieved un- 
coloured form, — this is the problem which the three 
great styles in sculpture have solved in three 
different ways. 

AUgemeinheit — ^breadth, generality, universality — 
is the word chosen by Winckelmann, and after him 
by Goethe and many German critics, to express that 
law of the most excellent Greek sculptors, of Phidias 
and his pupils, which prompted them constantly to 
seek the type in the individual, to purge from the 
individual all that belongs only to the individual, all 
the accidents, feelings, actions of a special moment, all 
that in its nature enduring for a moment looks like a 
frozen thing if you arrest it, to abstract and express 
ody what! peLnent, Bt^cturd. abiding. 

In this way their works came to be like some 
subtle extract or essence, or almost like p\ire thought^ 
or ideas ; and hence that broad humanity in them, that 
detachment from the conditions of a particular place 
or people, which has carried their influence far beyond 
the age which produced them, and insured them 
universal acceptance. 

That was the Greek way of relieving the hardness 



C 



V 



56 THE RENAISSANCE. iv. 

and unspirituality of pure form. But it involved 
for the most part the sacrifice of what we call 
expression ; and a system of abstraction which aimed 
always at the broad and general type, which purged 
away from the individual all that belonged only to 
him, all the accidents of a particular time and place, 
left the Greek sculptor only a narrow and passionless 
range of effects : and when Michelangelo came, with 
a genius spiritualised by the reverie of the middle 
age, penetrated by its spirit of inwardness and in- 
trospection, Uving not a mere outward life like the 
Greek, but a life full of inward experiences, sorrows, 
consolations, a system which sacrificed what was 
inward could not satisfy him. To him, lover and 
student of Greek sculpture as he was, work which 
did not bring what was inward to the surface, 
which was not concerned with individual expres- 
sion, character, feeling, the special history of the 
special soul, was not worth doing at all. 

And so, in a way quite personal and peculiar to 
himself, which often is, and always seems, the efiect 
of accident, he secured for his work individuality 
and intensity of expression, while he avoided a too 
hard realism, that tendency which the representation 
of feeling in sculpture always has to harden into 
caricature. What time and accident, its centuries of 
darkness, under the furrows of the 'little Melian 



IV. LUC A BELLA ROBBI± 67 

farm/ has done with a singular felicity of touch for 
the Venus of Melos, fraying its surface and soften- 
ing its lines, so that some spirit in the thing seems 
always on the point of breaking out of it, as if 
in it classical sculpture had advanced already one 
step into the mystical Christian age, so that of all 
ancient work its effect is most like that of Michelan- 
gelo^s own sculpture ; — ^this effect Michelangelo gains 
by leaving all his sculpture in a puzzling sort of 
incompleteness, which suggests rather than realises 
actual form. Something of the wasting of that snow- 
image which he moulded at the command of Piero 
de' Medici, when the snow lay one night in the court < 
of the Pitti, lurks about all his sculpture, as if he had 
determined to make the quality of a task exacted 
from him half in derision the pride of all his work. 
Many have wondered at that incompleteness, sus- 
pecting however that Michelangelo himself loved and 
was loath to change it, feeling at the same time that 
they too would lose something if that half-hewn 
form ever quite emerged from the rough hewn 
stone : and they have vnshed to fathom the charm of 
this incompleteness. Well! that incompleteness is 
Michelangelo's equivalent for colour in sculpture ; it ^ 
is his way of etherealising pure form, relieving its 
hard realism, communicating to it breath, pulsation, 
the effect of life. It was a characteristic too which 



58 THE RENAISSANCE. iv. 

fell in with his peculiax temper and mode of life, 
his disappointments and hesitations. It was in re- 
ality perfect finish. In this way he combines the 
utmost amount of passion and intensity with the ex- 
pression of a yielding and flexible life : he gets not 
vitality merely, but a wonderful force of expression. 

' Midway between these two systems — the system of 
the Greek sculptors and the system of Michelangelo — 
comes the system of Luca della Eobbia and the other 
Tuscan sculptors of the fifteenth century, partaking 
both of the Allgemeinheit of the Greeks, their way of 
extracting certain select elements only in pure form 
and sacrificing all the others, and the studied in- 
completeness of Michelangelo, reUeving that ex- 
pression of intensity, passion, energy, which would 
otherwise have hardened into caricature. Like 
Michelangelo these sculptors fill their works with 
intense and individualised expression : their noblest 
works are the studied sepulchral portraits of par- 
ticular individuals — the tomb of Conte Ugo in the 
Abbey of Florence, the tomb of the youthful Medea 
Colleoni, with the wonderful long throat, in the 
chapel on the cool north side of the Chinrch of Santa 
Maria Maggiore at Bergamo ; and they unite the 
element of tranquillity, of repose, to this intense and 
individualised expression by a system of conven- 
tionalism as subtle and skilful as that of the Greeks, 



m LUC A BELLA ROBBIA. 59 

by subduing all the curves wbich indicate solid form, 
and throwing the whole into low relief. 

The life of Luca, a life of labour and frugality, 
with no adventure and no excitement except what 
belongs to the trial of new artistic processes, the 
struggle with new artistic diflSculties, the solution of 
purely artistic problems, fills the first seventy years 
of the fifteenth century. After producing many 
works in marble for the Duomo and the Campanile of 
Florence, which place him among the foremost sculp- 
tors of that age, he became desirous to realise the 
spirit, the manner, of that sculpture in a humbler 
material, to imite its science, its exquisite and ex- 
pressive system of low relief, to the homely art of 
pottery, to introduce those high qualities into com- 
mon things, to adorn and cultivate daily household 
life. In this he is profoundly characteristic of the 
Florence of that century, of that in it which lay 
below its superficial vanity and caprice, a certain 
old-world modesty and seriousness and simplicity. 
People had not yet begun to think that what was 
good art for churches was not so good or less fitted 
for their own houses. Luca's new work was of plain 
white at first, a mere rough imitation of the costly, 
laboriously wrought marble, finished in a few hours. 
But on this humble path he found his way to a fresh 
success, to another artistic grace. The fame of oriental 



60 THE RENAISSANCE. iv. 

pottery, with its strange bright colours— colours of 
art, colours not to be attained in the natural stone — 
mingled with the tradition of the old Koman pottery 
of the neighbourhood. The little red coral-like jars 
of Arezzo dug up in that district frond time to time 
are still famous. These colours haunted Luca's fancy. 
* He still continued seeking something more,' his 
biographer says of him ; * and instead of making his 
terra-cotta figures simply white, he added the further 
invention of giving them colour, to the astonishment 
and dehght of all who beheld them. Oosa singolare 
e molto utile per lo state !' — a curious thing and very 
useful for summer time, full of coolness and repose 
for hand and eye. Luca loved the forms of various 
finits, and wrought them into all sorts of marvellous 
frames and garlands, giving them their natural 
colours, only subdued a little, a little paler than 
nature. But in his nobler terra-cottas, he never in- 
troduces colour into the flesh, keeping mostly to 
blue and white, the colours of the Virgin Mary. 

I said that the work of Luca della Bobbia 
possessed in an extreme degree that peculiar charac- 
teristic which belongs to all the workmen of his 
school, a characteristic which, even in the absence of 
much positive information about their actual history, 
seems to bring the workman himself very near to us, 
the impress of a personal quality, a profound ex- 



IV. LUOA BELLA ROBBIA. 61 

pressiveness, what the French call intimitSy by which 
is meant a subtler sense of originality, the seal on a 
Ws work of what is most in W L pe^oliar in 
his moods and manner of apprehension : it is what we 
call expression carried to its highest intensity of de- 
gree. That characteristic is rare in poetry, rarer still 
in art, rarest of all in the abstract art of sculpture ; 
yet at bottom perhaps it is the characteristic which 
alone makes works in the imaginative and moral 
order really worth having at all. It is because the 
works of the artists of the fifteenth century possess 
this quality in an unmistakeable degree that one is 
anxious to know aU that can be known about them 
and explain to oneself the secret of their charm. 



THE POETEY OF MICHELANGELO. 

Critics of Michelangelo have sometimes spoken 
as if the only characteristic of his genius were a 
wonderful strength, verging, as in the things of the 
imagination great strength always does, on what is 
singular or strange. A certain strangeness, some- 
, thing of the blossoming of the aloe, is indeed an 
u; element in all true works of art; that they shall 
excite or surprise us is indispensable. But that they 
shall give pleasure and exert a charm over us is in- 
dispensable too ; and this strangeness must be sweet 
also, a lovely strangeness. And to the true ad- 
mirers of Michelangelo this is the true type of the 
Michelangelesque — sweetness and strength, pleasure 
with surprise, an energy of conception which seems 
at every moment about to break through all the con- 
ditions of comely form, recovering, touch by touch, a 
loveliness found usually only in the simplest natural 
things — ex forti dulcedo. 

In this way he simis up for them the whole 
character of mediaeval art itself in that which dis- 
tinguishes it most clearly from classical work, the 



/ 



V. THE POETRY OF MICHELANGELO. 63 

presence of a convulsive energy in it, becoming in 
lower hands merely monstrous or forbidding, but 
felt even in its most graceful products as a subdued 
quaintness or grotesque. Yet those who feel this 
grace or sweetness in Michelangelo might at the 
first moment be puzzled if they were asked wherein 
precisely the quality resided. Men of inventive 
temperament (Victor Hugo, for instance, in whom, as 
in Michelangelo, people have for the most part been 
attracted or repelled by the strength, while few have 
tmderstood his sweetness) have sometimes relieved 
conceptions of merely moral or spiritual greatness, 
but with little aesthetic charm of their own, by lovely 
accidents or accessories, like the butterfly which 
alights on the blood-stained barricade in * Les Mise- 
rabies' or those sea-birds for whom the monstrous 
Gilliatt comes to be as some wild natural thing, 
so that they are no longer afraid of him, in *Les 
TravaUleurs de la Mer.' But the austere genius of 
Michelangelo will not depend for its sweetness on 
any mere accessories like these. The world of 
natural things has almost no existence for him, 
'When one speaks of him,' says Grimm, 'woods, 
clouds, seas, and mountains disappear, and only what 
is formed by the spirit of man remains behind ; ' and 
he quotes a few slight words from a letter of his to 
Vasari as the single expression in all he has left of 



u 



64 THE RENAISSANCE. v. 

a feeling for nature. He has traced no flowers like 
those with which Lionardo stars over his gloomiest 
rocks ; nothing like the ifretwork of wings and flames 
in which Blake frames his most startling conceptions ; 
no forest-scenery like Titian's fills his backgrounds, 
but only blank ranges of rock and dim vegetable 
forms . as "blank as they, as in a world before the 
creation of the first five days. 

Of the whole story of the creation he has painted 
only the creation of the firat man and woman, and, 
for him at least, feebly, the creation of light. It 
belongs to the quality of his genius thus to concern 
itself almost exclusively with the creation of man. 
For him it is not, as in the story itself, the last and 
crowning act of a series of developments, but the 
first and unique act, the creation of life itself in its 
supreme form, off'-hand and immediately, in the cold 
and lifeless stone. With him the beginning of life 
has all the characteristics of resurrection ; it is like 
the recovery of suspended health or animation, with 
its gratitude, its effusion, and eloquence. Fair as 
the young men of the Elgin marbles, the Adam of 
the Sistine Chapel is unlike them in a total absence 
of that balance and completeness which expresses sa ' 
well the sentiment of a self-contained, independeuc 
life. In that languid figure there is something rough 
and satyr-Uke, something akin to the rough hill-side 



» ' J 



4 



V. TEE POETRY OF MICHELANGELO. 65 

on which it lies. His whole form is gathered into an 
expression of mere expectation and reception ; he has 
hardly strength enough to lift his finger to touch the 
finger of the creator ; yet a touch of the fijiger-tips 
will suffice. 

This creation of Ufe, life coming always as relief or 
recovery, and always in strong contrast with the rough- 
hewn mass in which it is kindled, is in various ways 
the motive of all his work, whether its immediate 
subject be Pagan or Christian, legend or allegory ; and 
this, although at least one half of his work was 
designed for the adornment of tombs — ^the tomb of 
J\:Lii 18, the tombs of the MedicL Not the Judgment 
but the Eesurrection is the real subject of his last 
work in the Sistine ; and his favourite Pagan subject 
is the legend of Leda, the delight of the world break- 
ing from the egg of a bird. He secures that ideality 
of expression, which in Greek sculpture depends on 
a delicate system of abstraction, and in early Italian 
sculpture on lowness of relief, by an incompleteness 
wHch is surely not always undesigned, and which I 
suppose no one regrets, and trusts to the spectator to 
complete the half-emerged form. And as his persons 
have something of the unwrought stone about them, 
so as if to realise the expression by which the old 
Florentine records describe a sculptor, master of live 
stone, with him the very rocks seem to have life; 



66 THE RENAISSANCE. v. 

they have but to cast away the dust and scurf to rise 
and stand on their feet. He loved the very quarries 
of Carrara, those strange grey peaks which even at 
midday convey into any scene from which they are 
visible something of the solemnity and stillness of 
evening, sometimes wandering among them month 
after month, till at last their pale ashen colours seem 
to have passed into his painting ; and on the crown 
of the head of the David there still remains a morsel 
of unhewn stone, as if by one touch to maintain its 
connexion with the plax^ from which it was hewn. 

And it is in this penetrative suggestion of life that 
the secret of that sweetness of his is to be found. He 
gives us no lovely natural objects like Lionardo, but 
only blank ranges of rock, and dim vegetable forms 
as blank as they ; no lovely draperies and comely 
gestures of life, but only the austere truths of human 
nature ; 'simple persons'-^ lie repUed in his rough 
way to the querulous criticism of Julius the Second 
that there was no gold on the figures of the Sistine 
Chapel — ' simple persons, who wore no gold on their 
garments/ But he penetrates us with a sense of that 
power which we associate with all the warmth and 
fuhiess of the world, and the sense of which brings 
into one's thoughts a swarm of birds and flowers and 
insects. The brooding spirit of life itself is there ; 
and the summer may burst out in a moment. 



V. TEE POETRY OF MICHELANGELO, 67 

He was bom in an interval of a rapid midnight 
journey in March, at a place in the neighbour- 
hood of Arezzo, the thin, clear air of which it was 
then thought was favourable to the birth of children 
of great parts. He came of a race of grave and 
dignified men, who, claiming kinship with the 
femily of Canossa, and some colour of imperial 
blood in their veins, had, generation after genera- 
tion, received honourable employment under the 
government of Florence. His mother, a girl of 
nineteen years, put him out to nurse at a country 
house among the hills of Settignano, where every 
other inhabitant is a worker in the marble quarries, 
and the child early became familiar with that 
strange first stage in the sculptor's art. To this 
succeeded the influence of the sweetest and most 
placid master Florence had yet seen, Domenico 
Ghirlandajo. At fifteen he was at work among 
the curiosities of the garden of the Medici, copying 
and restoring antiques, winning the condescending 
notice of the great Lorenzo. He knew too how to 
excite strong hatreds; and it was at this time 
that in a quarrel with a fellow-student he received ' 
a blow in the face which deprived him for ever 
of the dignity of outward form. It was through 
an accident that he came to study those works of 
the early Italian sculptors which suggested much 

P 2 



I 



68 THE RENAISSANCE. v. 

of his own grandest work and impressed it with 
so deep a sweetness. He believed in dreams and 
omens. A friend of his dreamed twice that Lorenzo, 
then lately dead, appeared to him in grey and dusty 
apparel. To Michelangelo this dream seemed to 
portend the troubles which afterwards reaUy came, 
and with the suddenness which was characteristic of 
all his movements he left Florence. Having occasion 
to pass through Bologna he neglected to procure 
the little seal of red wax which the stranger enter- 
ing Bologna must carry on the thumb of his right 
hand. He had no money to pay the fine, and 
would have been thrown into prison had not 
one of the magistrates interfered. He remained 
in this man s house a whole year, rewarding his 
hospitality by readings from the Italian poets whom 
he loved. Bologna, with its endless colonnades and 
fantastic leaning towers, can never have been one 
of the lovelier cities of Italy. But about the portals 
of its vast unfinished churches and dark shrines, 
half-hidden by votive flowers and candles, lie some 
of the sweetest works of the early Tuscan sculptors, 
Giovanni da Pisa and Jacopo della Querela, things 
as soft as flowers ; and the year which Michelangelo 
spent in copying these works was not a lost yQar. 
It was now, on returning to Florence, that he put 
forth that unique conception of Bacchus, which 



T. THE POETRY OF MICHELANGELO. 69 

expresses not the mirthfiilness of the god of wine, 
but Ms sleepy seriousness, his enthusiasm, his 
capacity for profound dreaming. No one ever ex- 
pressed more truly than Michelangelo the notion 
of inspired sleep, of faces charged with dreams. A 
vast fragment of marble had long lain below the 
Loggia of Orcagna, and many a sculptor had had 
his thoughts of a design which should just fill this 
famous block of stone, cutting the diamond, as it 
were, without loss. Under Michelangelo's hand it 
became the David which now stands on the steps 
of the Palazzo Vecchio. Michelangelo was now 
thirty years old, and his reputation was established. 
Three great works fiU the remainder of his life; 
three works often interrupted, carried on through 
a thousand hesitations, a thousand disappointments, 
quarrels with his patrons, quarrels with his family, 
quarrels perhaps most of all with himself — the 
Sistine Chapel, the Mausoleum of Julius the Second, 
and the sacristy of San Lorenzo. 

In the story of Michelangelo's life, the strength 
often turning to bitterness is not far to seek ; a f / 
discordant note sounds throughout it which almost ' 
spoils the music. He * treats the Pope as the King 
of Fran<je himself would not dare to treat him ;' 
he goes along the streets of Kome * like an exe- 
cutioner/ Eaffaelle says of him. Once he seems to 



70 THE RENAISSANCE. v. 

have shut himself up with the intention of starving 
himself to death. As one comes in reading his life 
on its harsh, untempered incidents, the thought 
again and again arises that he is one of those who 
incur the judgment of Dante, as having wilfully 
lived in sadness. Even his tenderness and pity are 
embittered by their strength. What passionate 
weeping in that mysterious figure which in the 
* Creation of Adam' crouches below the image of the 
Almighty, as he comes with the forms of things 
to be, woman and her progeny, in the fold of his 
garment ! What a sense of wrong in those two 
captive youths who feel the chains like scalding 
water on their proud and delicate flesh! The 
idealist who became a reformer with Savonarola, 
and a republican superintending the fortification of 
Florence — the nest where he was bom, il nido ove 
naqqu'ioy as he calls it once in a sudden throb of 
affection — in its last struggle for liberty, yet believed 
always that he had imperial blood in his veins and 
was of the kindred of the great Matilda, had within 
the depths of his nature some secret spring of in- 
dignation or sorrow. We know little of his youth, 
but all tends to make one believe in the vehemence 
of its passions. Beneath the Platonic calm of the 
' sonnets there is latent a deep delight in carnal form 
and colour. There, and stiU more in the madrigals, 



V. THE POETRY OF MIOHELANGELO, 71 

he often falls into the language of less tranquil 
affections ; while some of them have the colour of 
penitence, as from a wanderer returning home. He 
who spoke so decisively of the supremacy in the 
imaginative world of the unveiled human form had 
not been always a mere Platonic lover. Vague and 
wayward his loves may have been ; but they partook 
of the strength of his nature, and sometimes would 
by no means become music, so that the comely order 
of his days was quite put out ; 'par eke wmaro ogni 
mio dolce io senta. 

But his genius is in harmony with itself; and just 
as in the products of his art we find resources of 
sweetness within their, exceeding strength, so in his 
own story also, bitter as the ordinary sense of it 
may be, there are select pages shut in among the 
rest, pages one might easily turn over too lightly, 
but which yet sweeten the whole volume. The 
interest of Michelangelo's poems is that they make 
us spectators of this struggle ; the struggle of a 
strong nature to adorn and attime itself; the 
struggle of a desolating passion, which yearns to be 
resigned and sweet and pensive, as Dante^s was. It 
is a consequence of the occasional and informal 
character of his poetry that it brings us nearer to 
himself, his own mind and temper, than any work 
done merely to support a literary reputation could 



72 THE RENAISSANCE. v. 

possibly do. His letters tell us little that is worth 
knowing about him, a few poor quarrels about 
money and commissions. But it is quite otherwise 
with these songs and sonnets, written down at odd 
moments, sometimes on the margins of his sketches, 
themselves often imfinished sketches, arresting some 
salient feeling or unpremeditated idea as it passed. 
And it happens that * a true study of these has 
become within the last few years for the first time 
possible. A few of the sonnets circulated widely in 
manuscript, and became almost within Michelangelo^s 
own lifetime a subject of academical discourses. But 
they were first collected in a volimae in 1623 by the 
great-nephew of Michelangelo, Michelangelo Buonar- 
roti the younger. He omitted much, re- wrote the 
sonnets in part, and sometimes compressed two or 
more compositions into one, always losing something 
of the force and incisiveness of the original. So the 
book remained, neglected even by Italians them- 
selves in the last century, through the influence of 
that French taste which despised all compositions 
of the kind, as it despised and neglected Dante. Sa 
reputation s^affirmira tovjours, Voltaire says of 
Dante, parce qu'on ne le lit guere. But in 1858 
the last of the Buonarroti bequeathed to the muni- 
cipality of Florence the curiosities of his family. 
Among them was a precious volume containing the 



V. THE POETRY OF MICHELANGELO. 73 

autograph of the sonnets. A learned Italian, Signer 
Cesare Guasti, undertook to collate this autograph 
with other manuscripts at the Vatican and else- 
where, and in 1863 published a true version of 
Michelangelo's poems, with dissertations and a parar 
phrase. 

People have often spoken of these poems as if they 
were a mere cry of distress, a lover's complaint over 
the obduracy of Vittoria Colonna. But those who 
speak thus forget that though it is quite possible 
that Michelangelo had seen Vittoria, that somewhat 
shadowy figure, as early as 1537, yet their closer 
intimacy did not begin till about the year 1542, 
when Michelangelo was nearly seventy years old. 
Vittoria herself, an ardent Neo-catholic, vowed to 
perpetual widowhood since the news had reached 
her, seventeen years before, that her husband, the 
youthful and princely Maxquess of Pescara, lay dead 
of the wounds he had received in the battle of Pavia, 
was then no longer an object of great passion. In a 
dialogue written by the painter, Francesco d'Ollanda, 
we catch a glimpse of them together in an empty 
church at Rome, one Sunday afternoon, discussing 
indeed the characteristics of various schools of art, 
but still more the writings of Saint Paul, already 
following the ways and tasting the sunless pleasures 
of weary people, whose hold on outward things 



74 THE RENAISSANCE. v. 

is slackening. In a letter still extant he regrets 
that when he visited her after death he had kissed 
her hands only. He made, or set to work to make, 
a crucifix for her use, and two drawings, perhaps in 
preparation for it, are now in Oxford. From al- 
lusions in the sonnets we may divine that when they 
first approached each other he had debated much 
with himself whether this last passion would be the 
most unsoftening, the most desolating of all — un 
dolce amaro, un si e no mi muovi; is it carnal affec- 
tion, or del suo prestino stato — Plato's ante-natal 
state — il raggio ardentel The older conventional 
criticism, dealing with the text of 1623, had lightly 
assumed that all, or nearly all the sonnets were 
actually addressed to Vittoria herself; but Signor 
Guasti finds only four, or at most five, which can be 
so attributed on genuine authority. Still there are 
reasons which make him assign the majority of them 
to the period between 1542 and 1547, and we may 
regard the volume as a record of this resting-place 
,in Michelangelo's story. We know how Goethe 

Pi 

escaped from the stress of sentiments too strong for 
him by making a book about them ; and for Michel- 
angelo to write down his passionate thoughts at 
all, to make sonnets about them, was already in 
some measure to command and have his way with 
them ; — 



V. THE POETRY OF MICHELANGELO, 76 

'La vita del mia amor non h il cor mio, 
Ch'amor, di quel ch'io t'amo, I' senza core.' 

It was just because Vittoria raised no great 
passion that the space m his life where she reigns 
has such peculiar suavity; and the spirit of the son- 
nets is lost if we once take them out of that dreamy 
atmosphere in which men have things as they will, C 
because the hold of all outward tlungs upon them is 
faint and thin. Their prevailing tone is a calm and 
meditative sweetness. The cry of distress is indeed 
there, but as a mere residue, a trace of bracing 
chalybeate salt, just discernible in the song which 
rises as a clear sweet spring from a charmed space 
in his life. 

This charmed and temperate space in Michel- 
angelo's life, without which its excessive strength 
would have been so imperfect, which saves him from 
the judgment of Dante on those who wilfully lived in 
sadness^ is a well-defined period there, reaching from 
the year 1542 to the year 1547, the year of Vittoria^s 
death. In it, the life-long effort to tranquillise his 
vehement emotions by withdrawing them into the 
region of ideal sentiment becomes successful ; and the 
significance of Vittoria in it, is that she realises for 
him a type of affection which even in disappoint- 
ment may charm and sweeten his spirit. In this 
effort to tranquillise and sweeten life by idealising its 



76 THE RENAISSANCE. • v. 

vehement sentiments there were two great traditional 
types, either of which an Italian of the sixteenth 
century might have followed. There was Dante, 
whose little book of the *Vita Nuova' had early 
become a pattern of imaginative love, maintained 
somewhat feebly by the later Petrarchists ; and since 
Plato had become something more than a name in 
Italy by the publication of the Latin translation of 
his works by Marsilio Ficino, there was the Platonic 
tradition also. Dante's belief in the resurrection of 
the body, through which even in heaven Beatrice 
loses for him no tinge of flesh-colour or fold of 
raiment even, and the Platonic dream of the passage 
of the soul through one form of life after another, 
with its passionate haste to escape from the burden 
of bodily form altogether, are, for all effects of art or 
poetry, principles diametrically opposite. And it is 
the Platonic tradition rather than Dante's that has 
moulded Michelangelo's verse. In many ways no 
sentiment could have been less like Dante's love for 
Beatrice than Michelangelo's for Vittoria Colonna. 
Dante's comes in early youth; Beatrice is a child, 
with the wistful ambiguous vision of a child, with a 
character still unaccentuated by the influence of out* 
ward circumstances, almost expressionless. Vittoria 
is a woman already weary, in advanced age, of grave 
intellectual qualities. Dante's story is a piece of 



V. THE FOMTBY OF MICHELANGELO. 77 

figured work inlaid with lovely incidents. In 
Michelangelo's poems frost and fire are almost the 
* only images — the refining fire of the goldsmith ; once 
or twice the phoenix ; ice melting at the fire ; fire 
struck fi-om the rock which it afterwards consumes. 
Except one doubtfiil allusion to a journey, there are 
almost no incidenta But there is much of the bright 
sharp unerring skill with which in boyhood he gave 
the look of age to the head of a faun by chipping 
a tooth fi'om its jaw with a single stroke of the 
hammer. For Dante, the amiable and devout ma- 
teriahsm of the Middle Age sanctifies all that is 
presented by hand and eye. Michelangelo is always 
pressing forward fi'om the outward beauty — il bel del 
fuor che agli occhi piace — to apprehend the unseen 
beauty ; trascenda nella forma universale — that ab- 
stract form of beauty about which the Platonists 
reason. And this gives the impression in him of [j 
something flitting and unfixed, of the houseless and ' 
complaining spirit, almost clairvoyant through the 
firail and yielding flesh. He accounts for love at first 
sight by a previous state of existence — la dove io 
famai prima \ 

* The 'Contemporary Review' for September, 1872, contains 
translations of ' Twenty-three Sonnets from Michael Angelo,' exe- 
cated with great taste and skill, from the original text as pub- 
lished by Quasti. I venture to quote the following : — 



78 THE RENAISSANCE, v. 

And yet there are many points in which he is really 
like Dante, and comes very near to the original 



To VlTTOElA COLONNA. 

Bring back the time when blind desire ran free, 

With bit and rein too loose to curb his flight; 

Give back the buried face, once angel-bright, 
That hides in earth all comely things from me ; 
Bring back those journeys ta'en so toilsomely. 

So toibome slow to him whose hairs are white; 

Those tears and flames that in our breast unite ; 
If thou wilt once more take thy All of me ! 

Yet, Love ! suppose it true that thou dost thrive 
Only on bitter honey-dews of tears. 
Small proflt hast thou of a weak old man. 
My soul that toward the other shore doth strive, 
Wards off" thy darts with shafts of holier fears ; 
And fire feeds ill on brands no breath can fan. 

To ToMMASo Cavaliebi. 

Why should I seek to ease intense desire 

With still more tears and windy words of grief. 
When heaven, or late or soon, sends no relief 

To souls whom love hath robed around with fire? 

Why needs my aching heart to death aspire, 
When all must diel Nay death beyond belief 
Unto those eyes would be both sweet and brief, 

Since in my sum of woes all joys expire ! 

Therefore because I cannot shun the blow 
I rather seek, say who must rule my breast, 

Gliding between her gladness and her woel 
If only chains and bonds can make me blest. 

No marvel if alone and bare I go 

An armbd knight's captive and slave confessed. 



V. TEE POETRY OF MICHELANGELO. 79 

image over the later and feebler Petrarchists. He 
learns from Dante rather than from Plato, that for 
lovers, the surfeiting of desire — ove gran desir gran 
copia affrenay is a state less happy than misery full 
of hope — una miseria di speranza plena. He recalls 
him in the repetition of the words gentile and cortesia, 
in the personification of Amor, in the tendency to 
dwell minutely on the physical effects of the pre- 
sence of a beloved object on the pulses and the heart. 
Above all he resembles Dante in the warmth and 
intensity of his political utterances, for the lady of 
one of his noblest sonnets was from the first under- 
stood to be the city of Florence ; and he avers that 
all must be asleep in heaven if she who was created 



To Night. 

O night, O sweet though sombre span of time 1 
All things find rest upon their journey's end — 
Whoso hath praised thee well doth apprehend ; 

And whoso honours thee hath wisdom's prime. 

Our cares thou canst to quietude sublime, 

For dews and darkness are of peace the friend : 
Often by thee in dreams up-borne I wend 

From earth to heaven where yet I hope to climb. 

Thou shade of Death, through whom the soul at length 
Shuns pain and sadness hostile to the heart, 
Whom mourners find their last and sure relief, 
Thou dost restore our suffering flesh to strength, 
Driest our tears, assuagest every smart. 
Purging the spirits of the pure from grief. 



80 THE RENAISSANCE. v. 

m 

(Tangelica forma, for a thousand lovers, is appro- 
priated by one alone, some Piero or Alessandro de' 
Medici. Once and again he introduces Love and 
Death, who dispute concerning him ; for, like Dante 
and aU the nobler souls of Italy, he is much occupied 
with thoughts of the grave, and his true mistress 

l^ is Death ; death at first as the worst of all sorrows 
and disgraces, with a clod of the field for its brain ; 
afterwards death in its high distinction, its detach- 
ment from vulgar needs, the angry stains of life and 
action escaping fast. 

Some of those whom the gods love die young. 
This man, because the gods loved him, lingered on to 
be of immense patriarchal age, till the sweetness it 

1 1 had taken so long to secrete in him was found at 
last. Out of the strong came forth sweetness, ex 
forti dulcedo. The world had changed around him. 
Neo-catholicism had taken the place of the Renais- 
sance. The spirit of the Roman Church had changed ; 
in the vast world's cathedral which his skill had 
helped to raise for it, it looked stronger than ever. 
Some of the first members of the Oratory were 
among his intimate associates. They were of a spirit 
as imlike as possible from that of Lorenzo, or Savo- 
narola even. The opposition of the reform to art has 
been often enlarged upon ; far greater was that of the 
catholic revival But in thus fixing itself in a frozen 



V. THE POETRY OF MICHELANGELO. 81 

orthodoxy the catholic church had passed beyond 
him, and he was a stranger to it. In earlier days, 
when its beliefs had been in a fluid state, he too 
might have been drawn into the controversy; he 
might have been for spiritualising the papal sover- 
eignty, like Savonarola ; or for adjusting the dreams '^ 
of Plato and Homer with the words of Christ, like 
Pico of Mirandula. But things had moved onward, 
and such adjustments were no longer possible. 
For himself, he had long since fallen back on that 
divine ideal which, above the wear and tear of 
creeds, has been forming itself for ages as the pos- 
session of nobler souls. And now he began to feel 
the soothing influence which since that time the 
catholic church has often exerted over spirits too 
noble to be its subjects, yet brought within the 
neighbourhood of its action; consoled and tranquil- 
lised, as a traveller might be, resting for one evening 
in a strange city, by its stately aspect and the senti- 
ment of its many fortunes, just because with those 
fortimes he has nothing to do. So he lingers on ; 
a revenant, as the French say, a ghost out of another 
age, in a world too coarse to touch his faint sensi- 
bilities too closely; dreaming in a worn-out society, - 
theatrical in its life, theatrical in its art, theatrical 
even in its devotion, on the morning of the world's 

history, on the primitive form of man, on the images 

G 



82 THE RENAISSANCE. v. 

Tinder which that primitive world had conceived of 
spiritual forces. 

I have dwelt on the thought of Michelangelo as 
thus lingering beyond his time in a world not his 
own, because if one is to distmguish the peculiar 
savour of his work, he must be approached, not 
through his followers, but through his predecessors ; 
not through the marbles of Saint Peter's, but through 
the work of the sculptors of the fifteenth century- 
over the tombs and altars of Tuscany. He is the 
last of the Florentines, of those on whom the pecu- 
liar sentiment of the Florence of Dante and Giotto 
descended; he is the consummate representative of 
the form that sentiment took in the fifteenth century 
with men like Luca Signorelli and Mino da Fiesole. 
Up to him the tradition of sentiment is unbroken, 
the progi:ess towards surer and more mature methods 
of expressing that sentiment, continuous. But his 
professed disciples did not share this temper, they 
are in love with his strength only, and seem not to 
feel his grave and temperate sweetness. Theatricality 
is their chief characteristic ; and that is a quality as 
little attributable to Michelangelo as to Mino or Luca 
SignorelU. With him, as with them, all is passionate, 
serious, impulsive. 

This discipleship of Michelangelo, this dependence 



V. THE POETRY OF MICHELANGELO. 83 

of his on the tradition of the Florentine schools, is 
nowhere seen more clearly than in his treatment of 
the Creation, The Creation of Man had haunted the 
mind of the middle age like a dream ; and weaving 
it into a hundred carved ornaments of capital or 
doorway, the Italian sculptors had early impressed 
upon it that pregnancy of expression which seems to i 
give it many veiled meanings. As with other artistic 
conceptions of the middle age, its treatment became 
almost conventional, handed on from artist to. artist, 
with slight changes, till it came to have almost an 
independent abstract existence of its own. It was 
characteristic of the mediaeval mind thus to give an 
independent traditional existence to a speciial pictorial 
conception j or to a legend, like that of ' Tristram' or 
* TannhSuser,' or even to the very thoughts and 
substance of a book, like the ' Imitation,' so that no 
single workman could claim it as his own, and the 
book, the image, the legend, had itself a legend, and 
its fortunes, and a personal history ; and it is a sign 
of the medisevalism of Michelangelo that he thus 
receives from tradition his central conception, and 
does but add the last touches in transferring it to the 
frescoes of the Sistine Chapel. 

But there was another tradition of those earher, 
more serious Florentines of which Michelangelo 
is the inheritor, to which he gives the final 

G 2 



84 THE RENAISSANCE. v. 

expression, and which centres in the sacristy of San 
Lorenzo, as the tradition of the Creation centres in 
the Sistine Chapel. It has been said that all the 
great Florentines were pre-occupied with death. 
Outre-tombe ! Outre-tomhe ! is the burden of their 
thoughts, from Dante to Savonarola. Even the gay 
and licentious Boccaccio gives a keener edge to his 
stories by putting them in the mouths of a party of 
people who had taken refuge from the plague in a 
country-house. It was to this inherited sentiment, 
this practical decision that to be preoccupied with the 
thought of death was in itself dignifying, and a note 
of high quality, that the seriousness of the great 
Florentines of the fifteenth century was partly due ; 
and it was remforced in them by the actual sorrows 
of their times. How often, and in what various ways, 
had they seen life stricken down in their streets and 
houses. La bella Simonetta dies in early youth, and 
is borne to the grave with uncovered face. The 
^\ young Cardinal of Portugal dies on a visit to Florence 
— insignis formdfui et mirabili modestidy his epitaph 
dares to say; Rossellino carved his tomb in the church 
of San Miniato, with care for the shapely hands and 
feet and sacred attire ; Luca della Kobbia put his 
skyiest works there ; and the tomb of the youthful 
and princely prelate became the strangest and most 
beautiful thing in that strange and beautiful place. 



V. THE POETRY OF MICHELANGELO. 85 

After the execution of the Pazzi conspirators 
Botticelli is employed to paint their portraits. This 
preoccupation with serious thoughts and sad images . 
might easily have resulted, as it did, for instance, in 
the gloomy villages of the Rhine, or in the over- 
crowded parts of mediaeval Paris, as it still does in 
many a village of the Alps, in something merely 
morbid or grotesque, in the Danse Macabre of many 
French and German painters, or the grim inventions 
of Diirer. From such a result the Florentine masters 
of the fifteenth century were saved by their high 
Italian dignity and culture, and stiU more by their 
tender pity for the thing itself. They must often 
have leaned over the lifeless body when all was at 
length quiet and smoothed out. After death, it is / 
said, the traces of slighter and more superficial / 
dispositions disappear ; the lines become more simple 
and dignified; only the abstract lines remain, in a 
grand indifference. They came thus to see death in 
its distinction; and following it perhaps one stage 
further, and dwelling for a moment on the point 
where all that transitory dignity broke up, and dis- 
cerning with no clearness a new body, they paused 
just in time, and abstained with a sentiment of 
profound pity. 

Of all this sentiment Michelangelo is the achieve- 
ment ; and first of all of pity. Pietd,^ pity, the pity of 



86 THE RENAISSANCE. r. 

the Virgin Mother over the dead body of Christ, ex- 
panded into the pity of all mothers over aJl dead sons, 
the entombment, with its cruel * hard stones^ ; — ^that 
is the subject of his predilection. He has left it in 
many forms, sketches, half-finished designs, finished 
and unfinished groups of sculpture, but always as a 
hopeless, rayless, almost heathen sorrow, no divine 
sorrow, but mere pity and awe at the stiff limbs and 
colourless lips. There is a drawing of his at Oxford 
in which the dead body has sunk to the earth between 
his mother's feet with the arms extended over her 
knees. The tombs at San Lorenzo are memorials, not 
of any of the nobler and greater Medici, but of 
Giuliano and Lorenzo the younger, noticeable chiefly 
for their somewhat early death. It is mere human 
nature therefore which has prompted the sentiment 
here. The titles assigned traditionally to the four sym- 
bolical figures, * Night' and * Day,' ' the Twilight' and 
' the Dawn,' are far too definite for them ; they come 
much nearer to the mind and spirit of their author, 
and are a more direct expression of his thoughts than 
any merely symbolical conceptions could possibly be. 
They concentrate and express, less by way of definite 
conceptions than by the touches, the promptings of a 
piece of music, all those vague fancies, misgivings, 
presentiments, which shift and mix and define them- 
selves and fade again, whenever the thoughts try to 



V. THE POETRY OF MIGHELANGELO. 87 

fix themselves with sincerity on the conditions and 
surroundings of the disembodied spirit. I suppose no 
one would come here for consolation ; for seriousness, 
for solemnity, for dignity of impression perhaps, but 
not for consolation. It is a place neither of terrible 
nor consohng thoughts, but of vague and wistful 
speculation. Here again Michelangelo is the disciple 
not so much of Dante as of the Platonists. Dante's 
belief in inunortahty is formal, precise^ and firm, as 
much so almost as that of a child who thinks the dead 
will hear if you cry loud enough. But in Michelangelo 
you have maturity, the mind of the grown man, 
dealing cautiously and dispassionately with serious 
things ; and what hope he has is based on the con- 
sciousness of ignorance— ignorance of man, ignorance 
of the nature of the mind, its origin and capacities. 
Michelangelo is so ignorant of the spiritual world, of 
the new body and its laws, that he does not surely 
know whether the consecrated host may not be the 
body of Christ. And of all that range of sentiment 
he is the poet, a poet still alive and in possession of 
our inmost thoughts — dimib inquiry, the relapse after 
death into the formlessness which preceded life, 
change, revolt jfrom that change, then the correcting, 
hallowing, consoling rush of pity ; at last, far off*, thin 
and vague, yet not more vague than the most definite 
thoToghts men have had through three centuries on a 



88 THE RENAISSANCE. v. 

matter that has been so near their hearts — ^the new 
body ; a passing light, a mere intangible, external 
effect ovar those too rigid or too formless faces; a 
dream that lingers a moment, retreating in the 
dawn, incomplete, aimless, helpless ; a thing with 
faint hearing, faint memory, faint power of touch ; 
a breath, a flame in the doorway, a feather in the 
wind. 

The qualities of the great masters in art or 
literature, the combination of those qualities, the 
laws by which they moderate, support, relieve each 
other, are not pecuhar to them ; but most often typical 
standards, revealing instances of the laws by which 
certain aesthetic effects are produced. The old masters 
indeed are simpler ; their characteristics are written 
larger, and are easier to read, than their analogues in 
all the mixed confused productions of the modern 
mind. But when once one has succeeded in defining 
for oneself those characteristics and the law of their 

r 

A combination, one has acquired a standard or measure 
which helps us to put in its right place many a 
vagrant genius, many an unclassified talent, many 
precious though imperfect products. It is so with the 
components of the true character of Michelangelo. 
That strange interfusion of sweetness and strength 
is not to be found in those who claimed to be his 



V. THE POETRY OF MICHELANGELO, 89 

followers; but it is found in many of those who 
worked before him, and in many others down to our 
own time, in William Blake, for instance, and Victor 
Hugo, who, though not of his school, and unaware, 
are his true sons, and help us to understand him, as 
he in turn interprets and justifies them. Perhaps 
this is the chief use in studying old masters. 



LIONARDO DA VINCI. 

In Vasari's life of Lionardo da Vinci as we now 
read it there are some variations from the first 
edition. There, the painter who has fixed the out- 
ward type of Christ for succeeding centuries was a 
bold speculator, holding lightly by other men's be- 
liefs, setting philosophy above Christianity. Words 
of his, trenchant enough to justify this impression, 
are not recorded, and would have been out of keep- 
ing with a genius of which one characteristic is 
the tendency to lose itself in a refined and graceful 
mystery. The suspicion was but the time-honoured 
form in which the world stamps its appreciation of 
one who has thoughts for himself alone, his high 
indifferentism, his intolerance of the common forms 
of things ; and in the second edition the image was 
changed into something fainter and more conven- 
itional. But it is still by a certain mystery in his 
1 .work, and something enigmatical beyond the usual 
measure of great men, that he fascinates, or perhaps 
half repels. His life is one of sudden revolts, with 
intervals in which he works not at aU, or apart 



VI. LIONARDO DA VINCI. 91 

from the main scope of his work. By a strange 
fortune the works on which his more popular fame 
rested disappeared early from the world, as the 
* Battle of the Standard' ; or are mixed obscurely 
with the work of meaner hands, as the *Last 
Supper/ His type of beauty is so exotic that it 
fascinates a larger niunber than it delights, and 
seems more than that of any other artist to reflect 
ideas and views and some scheme of the world 
within ; so that he seemed to his contemporaries 
to be the possessor of some xmsanctified and secret 
wisdom ; as to Michelet and others to have an- 
ticipated modern ideas. He trifles with his genius, r- 1 
and crowds all his chief work into a few tormented 
years of later life ; yet he is so possessed by his 
genius that he passes immoved through the most 
tragic events, overwhelming his country and friends, 
like one who comes across them by chance on some 
secret errand. 

His legend, as the French say, with the anecdotes 
which every one knows, is one of the most brilliant 
in Vasari. Later writers merely copied it, until, 
in 1804, Carlo Amoretti applied to it a criticism 
which left hardly a date fixed, and not one of those 
anecdotes untouched. And now a French . writer, 
M. Arsfene Houssaye, gathering together all that is 
known about Lionardo in an easily accessible form. 



92 THE RENAISSANCE. vi. 

haa done for the third of the three great masters 
what Grimm has done for Michelangelo, and Pas- 
savant, long since, for RafEaelle. Antiquarianism 
has no more to do. For others remain the editing 
of the thirteen books of his manuscripts, and the 
separation by technical criticism of what in his 
reputed works is really his, from what is only half 
his or the work of his pupils. But a lover of 
strange souls may still analyse for himself the im- 
pression made on him by those works, and try to 
reach through it a definition of the chief elements 
of Lionardo's genius. The legend^ corrected and en- 
larged by its critics, may now and then intervene 
to support the results of this analysis. 

His life has three divisions, — thirty years at 
Florence, nearly twenty years at Milan, then nine- 
teen years of wandering, till he. sinks to rest imder 
the protection of Francis the First at the ChS,teau 
de Clou. The dishonour of illegitimacy hangs over 
his birth. Piero Antonio, his father, was of a noble 
Florentine house, of Vinci in the Val d'Amo, and 
Lionardo, brought up delicately among the true 
children of that house, was the love-child of his 
^ youth, with the keen puissant nature such children 
\ often have. We see him in his youth fascinating 
all men by his beauty, improvising music and 
songs, buying the caged birds and setting them 



VI. LIONARDO DA VINCI. 93 "" 

free as lie walked the streets of Florence, fond of 
odd bright dresses and spirited horses. 

From his earliest years he designed many objects, 
and constructed models in relief, of which Vasari 
mentions some of women smiling. His father, 
pondering over this promise in the child, took him 
to the workshop of Andrea del Verrocchio, then the 
most famous artist in Florence. Beautiful objects 
lay about there, — reliquaries, pyxes, silver images 
for the pope's chapel at Rome, strange fancy work 
of the middle age keeping odd company with 
fragments of antiquity, then but lately discovered. 
Another student Lionardo may have seen there — 
a boy into whose soul the level light and aerial 
illusions of Italian sxmsets had passed, in after days 
famous as Perugino. Verrocchio was an artist of 
the ' earher Florentine type, carver, painter, and 
worker in metals in one ; designer, not of pictures 
only, but of all things for sacred or household use, 
drinking - vessels, ambries, instruments of music, 
making them all fair to look upon, filling the 
common ways of life with the reflection of some 
far-off brightness ; and years of patience had re- 
fined his hand tiU his work was now sought after 
from distant places. 

It happened that Verrocchio was employed by 
the brethren of Vallombrosa to paint the Baptism 



94 TEE RENAISSANCE, vi. 

of Christ, and Lionardo was allowed to finish an 
angel in the left-hand comer. It was one of those 
moments in which the progress of a great thing — 
here that of the art of Italy — presses hard and 
sharp on the happiness of an individual, through 
^' whose discouragement and decrease, humanity, in 
' more fortunate persons, comes a step nearer to its 
final success. 

For beneath the cheerful exterior of the mere 
well-paid craftsman, chasing brooches for the copes 
of Santa Maria Novella, or twisting metal screens 
for the tombs of the Medici, lay the ambitious 
desire of expanding the destiny of Italian art by 
a larger knowledge and insight into things, a pur- 
pose in art not unlike Lionardo's still unconscious 
purpose ; and often, in the modelling of drapery, or 
of a lifted arm, or of hair cast back from the face, 
there came to him something of the freer manner 
and richer humanity of a later age. But in this 
^ * Baptism' the pupil had surpassed the master ; and 
Verrocchio turned away as one stunned, and as if 
his sweet earlier work must thereafter be distasteful 
to him, from the bright animated angel of Lionardo' s 
hand. 

The angel may still be seen in Florence, a space 
of sunlight in the cold, laboured old picture ; but 
the legend is true only in sentiment, for painting 



VI. LIONARDO DA VINGI. 95 

had always been the art by which Verrocchio set 
least store. And as in a sense he anticipates Lio- 
nardo, so to the last Lionardo recalls the studio of 
Verrocchio, in the love of beautiful toys, such as 
the vessel of water for a mirror, and lovely needle- ; 
work about the implicated hands in the * Modesty 
and Vanity', and of rehefs, like those cameos which 
in the * Virgin of the Balances' hang all round the 
girdle of Saint Michael, and of bright variegated 
stones, such as the agates in the ' Saint Anne', and 
in a hieratic preciseness and grace, as of a sanctuary 
swept and garnished. Amid all the cunning and 
intricacy of his Lombard manner this never left 
him. Much of it there must have been in that lost 
picture of * Paradise', which he prepared as a cartoon 
for tapestry to be woven in the looms of Flanders. 
It was the perfection of the older Florentine style of 
miniature painting, with patient putting of each leaf 
upon the trees and each flower in the grass, where 
the first man and woman were standing. 

And because it was the perfection of that style, 
it awoke in Lionardo some seed of discontent which 
lay in the secret places of his nature. For the way 
to perfection is through a series of disgusts ; and 
this picture — all that he had done so far in his life at 
Florence — was after all in the old slight manner. 
His art, if it was to be something in the world, must 



96 THE RENAISSANCE, vi. 

be weighted with more of the meaning of nature and 
purpose of humanity. Nature was *the true mis- 
tress of higher intelKgences/ So he plunged into 
the study of nature. And in doing this he followed 
the manner of the older students ; he brooded over 
•the hidden virtues of plants and crystals, the lines 
traced by the stars as they moved in the sky, over 
the correspondences which exist between the dif- 
ferent orders of living things, through which, to 
eyes opened, they interpret each other ; and for years 
he seemed to those about him as one listening to a 
voice silent for other men. 

He learned here the art of going deep, of tracking 
the sources of expression to their subtlest retreats, 
the power of an intimate presence in the things he 
handled. He did not at once or entirely desert his 
art ; only he was no longer the cheerful objective 
painter, through whose soul, as through clear glass, 
the bright figures of Florentine life, only made a 
little mellower and more pensive by the transit, 
passed on to the white wall. He wasted many 
days in curious tricks of design, seeming to lose 
himself in the spinning of intricate devices of lines 
and colours. He was smitten with a love of the 
impossible — ^the perforation of mountains, changing 
the course of rivers, raisiug great buildings, such as 
the church of San Giovanni, in the air ; all those 



VI. LIONARLO DA VINCL 97 

feats for the performance of which natural magic 
professes to have the key. Later vmters, indeed, 
see in these efforts an anticipation of modem me- 
chanics ; in him they were rather dreams, throv^n 
off by the overwrought and labouring brain. Two 
ideas were especially fixed in him, as reflexes of 
things that had touched his brain in childhood be- 
yond the measure of other impressions — the smiling 
of women and the motion of great waters. 

And in such studies some interftision of the 
extremes of beauty and terror shaped itself, as an 
image that might be seen and touched, in the mind 
of this gracious youth, so fixed that for the rest of 
his Kfe it never left him ; and as catching glimpses 
of it in the strange eyes or hair of chance people, 
he would follow such about the streets of Florence 
till the sun went dovm, of whom many sketches of 
his remain. Some of these are full of a curious 
beauty, that remote beauty apprehended only by 
those who have sought it carefully; who, starting 
with acknowledged types of beauty, have refined as 
far upon these, as these refine upon the world of 
common forms. But mingled inextricably with this 
there is an element of mockery also; so that, 
whether in sorrow or scorn, he caricatures Dante 
even. Legions of grotesques sweep under his hand; 

for has not nature too her grotesques — the rent 

H 



98 THE RENAISSANCE. vi. 

rock, the distorting light of evening on lonely roads, 
the unveiled structure of man in the embryo or the 
skeleton ? 

All these swarming fancies unite in the * Medusa' 
of the Uffizii. Vasari's story of an earlier Medusa, 
painted on a wooden shield, is perhaps an invention ; 
and yet, properly told, has more of the air of truth 
about it than anything else in the whole legend. 
For its real subject is not the serious work of a man. 
but the experiment of a child. The lizards and 
glowworms and other strange small creatures which 
haimt an Italian vineyard bring before one the whole 
picture of a child's life in a Tuscan dwelling, half 
castle, half farm ; and are as true to nature as the 
pretended astonishment of the father for whom the 
boy has prepared a surprise. It was not in play 
that he painted that other Medusa, the one great 
picture which he left behind him in Florence. The 
subject has been treated in various ways ; Lionardo 
alone cuts to its centre ; he alone realises it as the 
head of a corpse, exercising its powers through all' 
the circumstances of deatL What may be called 
the fascination of corruption penetrates in every 
touch its exquisitely finished beauty. About the 
dainty lines of the cheek the bat flits unheeded. 
The delicate snakes seem literally strangling each 
other in terrified struggle to escape from the Medusa 



VI. LIONARLO DA VINCI, 99 

brain. The hue which violent death always brings 
with it is in the features ; features singularly mas- 
sive and grand, as we catch them inverted, in a 
dexterous foreshortening, sloping upwards, almost 
sliding down upon us, crown foremost, like a great 
calm stone against which the wave of serpents 
breaks. But it is a subject that may well be left 
to the beautiful verses of Shelley. 

The science of that age was all divination, clair- 
voyance, unsubjected to our exact modem formulas, 
seeking in an instant of vision to concentrate a 
thousand experiences. Later writers, thinking only 
of the well-ordered treatise on painting which a 
Frenchman, Kaffaelle du Fresne, a hundred years 
afterwards, compiled from Lionardo^s bewildered 
manuscripts, written strangely, as his manner was, 
from right to left, have imagined a rigid order in his 
inquiries. But this rigid order was little in accord- 
ance with the restlessness of his character ; and if 
we think of him as the mere reasoner who subjects 
design to anatomy, and composition to mathematical 
rules, we shall hardly have of him that impression 
which those about him received from him. Poring 
over his crucibles, making experiments with colour, 
trying by a strange variation of the alchemist's 
dream to discover the secret, not of an elixir to 
make man's natural life immortal, but rather of 

H 2 



100 THE RENAISSANCE. vi. 

giving immortality to the subtlest and most delicate 
effects of painting, he seemed to them rather the 
sorcerer or the magician, possessed of curious secrets 
and a hidden knowledge, living in a world of which- 
he alone possessed the key. What his philosophy 
seems to have been most like is that of Paracelsus or 
Cardan ; and much of the spirit of the older alchemy 
still hangs about it, with its confidence in short cuts 
and odd byways to knowledge. To him philosophy 
was to be something giving strange swiftness and 
double sight, divining the sources of springs beneath 
the earth or of expression beneath the human 
countenance, clairvoyant of occult gifts in common 
or uncommon things, in the reed at the brook-side 
or the star which draws near to us but once in a 
century. How in this way the clear purpose was 
overclouded, the fine chaser s hand perplexed, we but 
dimly see ; the mystery which at no point quite 
lifts from lionardo s life is deepest here. But it is 
certain that at one period of his life he had almost 
ceased to be an artist. 

The year 1483 — ^the year of the birth of EaffaeUe 
and the thirty-first of Lionardo's life — is fixed as 
the date of his visit to Milan by the letter in which 
he recommends himself to Ludovico Sforza, and 
offers to tell him for a price strange secrets in the 
art of war. It was that Sforza who murdered his 



VI. LIONARDO DA 7INCL 101 

young nephew by slow poison, yet was so sus- 
ceptible to religious impressions that he turned his 
worst passions into a kind of religious cultus, and 
who took for his device the mulberry tree — symbol, 
in its long delay and sudden yielding of flowers and 
fruit together, of a wisdom which economises all 
forces for an opportunity of sudden and sure effect. 
The fame of Lionardo had gone before him, and he 
was to model a colossal statue of Francesco, the 
first duke. As for Lionardo himself he came not 
as an artist at all, or careful of the fame of one ; 
but as a player on the harp, a strange harp of silver 
of his own construction, shaped in some curious 
likeness to a horse's skull. The capricious spirit of 
Ludovico was susceptible to the charm of music, 
and Lionardo' s nature had a kind of spell in it. 
Fascination is always the word descriptive of him. 
No portrait of his youth remains ; but all tends to 
make us believe that up to this time some charm of 
voice and aspect, strong enough to balance the 
disadvantage of his birth, had played about him. 
His physical strength was great ; it was said that 
he could bend a horseshoe like a coil of lead. 

The Duomo, the work of artists from beyond the 
Alps, so fantastic to a Florentine used to the mel- 
low imbroken surfaces of Giotto and Amolfo, was 
then in all its freshness ; and below, in the streets 






102 THE RENAISSANCE. vi. 

of Milan, moved a people as fantastic, changeful, 
and dreamlike. To Lionardo least of all men could 
there be anything poisonous in the exotic flowers 
of sentiment which grew there. It was a life of 
exquisite amusements, (Lionardo became a cele- 
brated designer of pageants,) and brilliant sins ; and 
it suited the quality of his genius, composed in 
almost equal parts of curiosity and the desire of 
beauty, to take things as they came. 

Curiosity and the desire of beauty -these are 
the two elementary forces in Lionardo's genius ; 
curiosity often in conflict with the desire of beauty, 
but generating, in union with it, a type of subtle 
and curious grace. 

The movement of the fifteenth century was two- 
fold: partly the Renaissance, partly also the com- 
ing of what is called the * modem spirit,' with its 
realism, its appeal to experience ; it comprehended 
a return to antiquity, and a return to nature. 
RaffaeUe represents the return to antiquity, and 
Lionardo the return to nature In this return to 
nature he was seeking to satisfy a boundless curiosity 
by her perpetual surprises, a microscopic sense of 
finish by her finesse, or delicacy of operation, that 
suhtilitas naturcB which Bacon notices. So we find 
him often in intimate relations with men of science, 
with Fra Luca Paccioli the mathematician, and the 



VI. LIONARDO DA VINCL 103 

anatomist Marc Antonio della Torre. His observa- 
tions and experiments fill thirteen volumes of manu- 
script; and those who can judge describe him as 
anticipating long before, by rapid intuition, the later 
ideas of science. He explained the obscure light 
of the unilluminated part of the moon, knew that 
the sea had once covered the mountains which 
contain shells, and the gathering of the equatorial 
waters above the polar. 

He who thus penetrated into the most secret parts 
of nature preferred always the more to the less 
remote, what, seeming exceptional, was an instance 
of law more refined, the construction about things 
of a peculiar atmosphere and mixed hghts. He 
paints flowers with such curious felicity that dif- 
ferent writers have attributed to him a fondness 
for particular flowers, as Clement the cyclamen, and 
Eio the jasmine ; while at Venice there is a stray 
leaf from his portfoho dotted all over with studies 
of violets and the wild rose. In him first, appears 
the taste for what is bizarre or recherche in land- 
scape ; hollow places full of the green shadow of 
bituminous rocks, ridged reefs of trap-rock which 
cut the water into quaint sheets of light — their 
exact antitype is in our own western seas ; all 
solemn eflfects of moving water ; you may follow it 
springing from its distant source among 'the rocks 



104 THE RENAISSANCE. vi. 

on the heath of the 'Madonna of the Balances/ 
passing as a little fall into the treacherous calm 
of the ' Madonna of the Lake/ next, as a goodly 
river below the cMs of the ' Madonna of the Rocks/ 
washing the white walls of its distant villages, 
stealing out in a network of divided streams in ' La 
Gioconda' to the sea-shore of the ' Saint Anne' — that 
delicate place, where the wind passes like the hand 
of some fine etcher over the surface, and the imtom 
shells lie thick upon the sand, and the tops of the 
rocks, to which the waves never rise, are green with 
grass grown fine as hair. It is the landscape, not of 
dreams or of fancy, but of places far withdrawn, 
and hours selected from a thousand with a miracle of 
finesse. Through his strange veil of sight things 
reach him so; in no ordinary night or day, but as 
in faint light of eclipse, or in some brief interval 
of falling rain at daybreak, or through deep water. 

And not into nature only ; but he plunged also 
into human personality, and became above all a 
painter of portraits ; faces of a modelling more skilful 
than has been seen before or since, embodied with a 
reality which almost amounts to illusion on dark air. 
To take a character as it was, and delicately sound its 
stops, suited one so curious in observation, curious in 
invention. So he painted the portraits of Ludovico's 
mistresses, Lucretia CriveUi and Cecilia Galerani the 



VI. LIONARDO DA VINCI. 105 

poetess, of Ludovico himself, and the Duchess Beatrice. 
The portrait of Cecilia Galerani is lost, but that of 
Lucretia Crivelli has been identified with * La Belle 
Feroniere' of the Louvre, and Ludovico's pale, anxious 
face still remains in the Ambrosian. Opposite is 
the portrait of Beatrice d'Este, in whom Lionardo 
seems to have caught some presentiment of early 
death, painting her precise and grave, full of the 
refinement of the dead, in sad earth-coloured raiment, 
set with pale stones. 

Sometimes this curiosity came in conflict with 
the desire of beauty; it tended to make him go 
too far below that outside of things in which art 
begins and ends. This struggle between the reason 
and its ideas, and the senses, the desire of beauty, 
is the key to Lionardo's life at Milan — ^his restless- 
ness, his endless retouchings, his odd experiments 
with colour. How much must he leave unfinished, 
how much recommence! His problem was the 
transmutation of ideas into images. What he had 
attained so far had been the mastery of that earlier 
Florentine style, with its naive and limited sen- 
suousness. Now he was to entertain in this narrow 
medium those divinations of a humanity too wide 
for it, that larger vision of the opening world which 
is only not too much for the great, irregular art 
of Shakespeare ; and everywhere the effort is visible 



106 THE RENAISSANCE. vi. 

in the work of his hands. This agitation, this per- 
petual delay, give him an air of weariness and ennui. 
To others he seems to be aiming at an impossible 
eflFect, to do something that art, that painting, can 
never do. Often the expression of physical beauty 
at this or that point seems strained and marred in 
the effort, as in those heavy German foreheads — 
too heavy and G-erman for perfect beauty. 

For there was a touch of Germany in that genius 
which, as Goethe said, had 'miide sich gedacht,' 
thought itsdf weary. What an anticipation of 
modem Germany, for instance, in that debate on 
the question whether sculpture or painting is the 
nobler art^ But there is this difference between 
him and the German, that, with all that curious 
science, the German would have thought nothing 
more was needed ; and the name of Goethe himself 
reminds one how great for the artist may be the 
danger of over-much science ; how Goethe, who, in 
the Elective Affinities and the first part of ^ Faust,' 
does transmute ideas into images, who wrought 
many such transmutations, did not invariably find 
the spell-word, and in the second part of * Faust' 
presents us with a mass of science which has no 



1 How princely, how characteristic of Lionardo, the answer, 
' Quanto piii, un' arte porta seco fatica di corpo, tanto piii h vile ! ' 



VI. ' LIONARDO DA VINCI. 107 

artistic character at all. But Lionardo will never 
work till the happy moment comes — ^that moment 
of bienStrey which to imaginative men is a moment 
of invention. On this moment he waits ; other 
moments are but a preparation or after-taste of it. 
Few men distinguish between them as jealously as 
he did. Hence so many flaws even in the choicest 
work. But for Lionardo the distinction is absolute, 
and, in the moment of hien-^tre^ the alchemy com- 
plete ; the idea is stricken into colour and imagery ; 
a cloudy mysticism is refined to a subdued and 
graceful mystery, and painting pleases the eye while 
it satisfies the soul. 

This curious beauty is seen above all in his 
drawings, and in these chiefly in the abstract grace 
of the bounding lines. Let us take some of these 
drawings, and pause over them awhile ; and, first, 
one of those at Florence — the heads of a woman 
and a little child, set side by side, but each in its 
own separate frame. First of all, there is much 
pathos in the re-appearance in the fuller curves of 
the face of the child, of the sharper, more chastened 
lines of the worn and older face, which leaves no 
doubt that the heads are those of a little child and 
its mother. A feeling for maternity is indeed always 
characteristic of Lionardo ; and this feeling is fur- 
ther indicated here by the half-humorous pathos of 






108 THE RENAISSANCE. vi. 

the diminutive rounded shoulders of the child. 
You may note a like pathetic power in drawings 
of a young man, seated iq a stoopiDg posture, his 
face in his hands, as in sorrow ; of a slave sitting 
in an uneasy sitting attitude in some brief interval 
of rest ; of a small Madonna and Child, peeping side« 
ways in half-reassured terror, as a mighty griffin 
with baUike wings, one of Lionaxdo's finest inven- 
tions, descends suddenly from the air to snatch 
up a lion wandering near them. But note in these, 
as that which especially belongs to art, the contour 
of the young man's hair, the poise of the slave's 
arm above his head, and the curves of the head of 
the child, following the little skull within, thin and 
fine as some sea-shell worn by the wind. 

Take again another head, still more full of sen- 
timent, but of a different kind, a little red chalk 
drawing which every one remembers who has seen 
the drawings at the Louvre. It is a face of doubt- 
ful sex, set in the shadow of its own hair, the cheek- 
line in high light against it, with something vo- 
luptuous and fiill in the eyelids and the Kpa 
Another drawing might pass for the same fiice in 
childhood, with parched and feverish lips, but with 
much sweetness in the loose, short-waisted, childish 
dress, with necklace and bulla, and the daintily 
bound hair. We might take the thread of sugges- 



VI. LIONARDO DA VINCL 109 

tion which these two drawings offer, thus set side 
by side, and, following it through the drawings 
at Florence, Venice, and Milan, construct a sort of 
series, illustrating better than anything else lio- 
nardo's type of womanly beauty. Daughters of 
Herodias, with their fantastic head-dresses knotted 
and folded so strangely, to leave the dainty oval of 
the face disengaged, they are not of the Christian 
family, or of Kaffaelle's. They are the clairvoyants, 
through whom, as through delicate instruments, one 
becomes aware of the subtler forces of nature, and 
the modes of their action, all that is magnetic in 
it, all those finer conditions wherein material things 
rise to that subtlety of operation which constitutes 
them spiritual, where only the finer nerve and the 
keener touch can follow ; it is as if in certain reveal- 
ing instances we actually saw them at their work on 
human flesh. Nervous, electric, faint always with 
some inexplicable faintness, they seem to be subject 
to exceptional conditions, to feel powers at work in 
the common air unfelt by others, to become, as it 
were, receptacles of them, and pass them on to us 
in a chain of secret influences. 

But among the more youthful heads there is 
one at Florence which Love chooses for its own — 
the head of a young man, which may well be the 
likeness of Salaino, beloved of Lionardo for his 



no THE RENAISSANCE. vl 

curled and waving hair — belli capelli ricci e 
inanellcUi — and afterwards his feivourite pupil and 
servant Of aU the interests in Uving men and 
women which may have filled his life at Milan, 
this attachment alone is recorded ; and in return, 
Salaino identified himself so entirely with Lionardo, 
that the picture of ' Saint Anne/ in the Louvre, has 
been attributed to him. It illustrates Lionardo's 
usual choice of pupils, men of some natural charm of 
person or intercourse like Salaino, or men of birth 
and princely habits of life like Francesco Melzi — men 
with just enough genius to be capable of initiation 
into his secret, for the sake of which they were ready 
to efface their own individuality. Among them, 
retiring often to the villa of the Melzi at Canonica 
al Vaprio, he worked at his fugitive manuscripts 
and sketches, working for the present hour, and 
for a few only, perhaps chiefly for himself. Other 
artists have been as careless of present or future 
applaiise, in self-forgetfulness, or because they set 
moral or political ends above the ends of art ; but 
in him this solitary culture of beauty seems to 
have hung upon a kind of self-love, and a care- 
lessness in the work of art of all but art itself. 
Out of the secret places of a unique temperament 
he brought strange blossoms and fruits hitherto 
unknown ; and for him the novel impression con- 



VI. LIONARDO DA VINCI. Ill 

veyed, the exquisite eflfect woven, counted as an 
end in itself— a perfect end. 

And these pupils of his acquired his manner so 
thoroughly, that though the number of Lionardo's 
authentic w^orks is very small indeed, there is a 
multitude of other men's pictures, through which 
we undoubtedly see him, and come very near to 
his genius. Sometimes, as in the little picture of 
the * Madonna of the Balances/ in which, from the 
bosom of his mother, Christ weighs the pebbles of 
the brook against the sins of men, we have a hand, 
rough enough by contrast, working on some fine 
hint or sketch of his. Sometimes, as in the subjects 
of the Daughter of Herodias and the head of John 
the Baptist, the lost originals have been re-echoed 
and varied upon again and again by Luini and 
others. At other times the original remains, but 
has been a mere theme or motive, a type of which 
the accessories might be modified or changed; and 
these variations have but brought out the more 
the purpose or expression of the original. It is so 
with the so-called Saint John the Baptist of the 
Louvre — one of the few naked figures Lionardo 
painted — whose delicate brown flesh and woman's 
hair no one would go out into the vrildemess to 
seek, and whose treacherous smile would have us un- 
derstand something far beyond the outward gesture 



112 THE RENAISSANCE. vi. 

or circumstance. But the long reed-like cross in 
the hand, which suggests Saint John the Baptist, 
becomes faint in a copy at the Ambrosian Library, 
and disappears altogether in another in the Palazzo 
Rosso at Genoa. Returning from the last to the 
original, we are no longer surprised by Saint John's 
strange likeness to the Bacchus, which hangs near 
it, which set Grautier thinking of Heine's notion of 
decayed gods, who, to maintain themselves after 
the fall of paganism, took employment in the 
new religion. We recognise one of those sym- 
bolical inventions in which the ostensible subject 
is used, not as matter for definite pictorial realisa- 
tion, but as the starting-point of a train of senti- 
ment, as subtle and vague as a piece of music. No 
one ever ruled over his subject more entirely than 
Lionardo, or bent it more dexterously to purely 
artistic ends. And so it comes to pass that though 
he handles sacred subjects continually, he is the 
most profane of painters ; the given person or sub- 
ject, Saint John in the Desert, or the Virgin on the 
knees of Saint Anne, is often merely the pretext' 
for a kind of work which carries one quite out of 
the range of its conventional associations. 

About the 'Last Supper,' its decay and restorations, 
a whole literature has risen up, Goethe's pensive 
sketch of its sad fortunes being far the best. The 



VI. LIONARDO DA VINCI. 113 

death in child-birtli of the Duchess Beatrice, was 
followed in Ludovico by one of those paroxysms 
of religious feeling which in him were constitutional. 
The low, gloomy Dominican church of Saint Mary 
of the Graces had been the favourite shrine of 
Beatrice. She had spent her last days there, full 
of sinister presentiments ; at last it had been almost 
necessary to remove her from it by force ; and 
now it was here that mass was said a hundred 
times a day for her repose. On the damp wall of 
the refectory, oozing with mineral salts, Lionardo 
painted the Last Supper. A hundred anecdotes 
were told about it, his retouchings and delays. 
They show him refusing to work except at the 
moment of invention, scornful of whoever thought i 
that art was a work of mere industry and rule, ' 
often coming the whole length of Milan to give a 
single touch. He painted it, not in fresco, where 
all must be impromptu^ but in oils, the new me- 
thod which he had been one of the first to wel- 
come, because it allowed of so many after-thoughts, 
so refined a working out of perfection. It turned 
out that on a plastered wall no process could 
have been less durable. Within fifty years it had 
fallen into decay. And now we have to turn back 
to Lionardo's own studies, above all, to one draw- 
ing of the central head at the Brera, which in a 

I 



114 THE RENAISSANCE. vi. 

union of tenderness and severity in the face-lines, 
reminds one of the monumental work of Mino da 
Fiesole, to trace it as it was. 

It was another effort to set a given subject 
out of the range of its conventional associations. 
Strange, after all the misrepresentations of the 
middle age, was the eflfort to see it, not as the 
pale host of the altar, but as one taking leave of 
his friends. Five years afterwards, the young Eaf- 
faelle, at Florence, painted it with sweet and 
solemn eflfect in the refectory of Saint Onofrio ; 
but still with all the mystical unreality of the 
school of Perugino. Vasari pretends that the* cen- 
tral head was never finished ; but finished or un- 
finished, or owing part of its effect to a mellow- 
ing decay, this central head does but consummate 
the sentiment of the whole company — ghosts 
through which you see the wall, faint as the 
shadows of the leaves upon the wall on autumn 
afternoons, this figure is but the faintest, most 
spectral of them all. It is the image of what the 
history it symbolises has been more and more ever 
since, paler and paler as it recedes from us. Criti- 
cism came with its appeal fi'om mystical unrealities 
to originals, and restored no life-like reality but 
these transparent shadows, spirits which have not 
flesh and bones. 



VI. LIONARDO DA VINCI. 115 

The *Last Supper' was finished in 1497; in 1498 
the French entered Milan, and whether or not the 
Gascon bowmen used it as a mark for their arrows ^, 
the model of Francesco Sforza certainly did not sur- 
vive. Ludovico became a prisoner, and the remain- 
ing years of Lionardo's life are more or less years 
of wandering. From his brQliant life at court he 
had saved nothing, and he returned to Florence a 
poor maa. Perhaps necessity kept his spirit ex- 
cited : the next four years are one prolonged rapture 
or ecstasy of invention. He painted the pictures of 
the Louvre, his most authentic works, which came 
there straight from the cabinet of Francis the First, 
at Fontainebleau. One picture of his, the Saint Anne 
— not the Saint Anne of the Louvre, but a mere 
cartoon now in London — ^revived for a moment a 
sort of appreciation more common in an earlier time, 
when good pictures had still seemed miraculous ; 
and for two days a crowd of people of aU qualities 
passed in naive excitement through the chamber 
where it hung, and gave Lionardo a taste of Cima- 
bue's triumph. But his work was less with the 
saints than with the living women of Florence ; for 
he lived still in the polished society that he loved, 



^ M. Arsfene Houssaye comes to save the credit of his country- 
men. 

I 2 



116 THE RENAISSANCE. vi. 

and in the houses of Florence, left perhaps a little 
subject to light thoughts by the death of Savonarola 
(the latest gossip is of an undraped Monna Lisa, 
found in some out-of-the-way corner of the late 
Orleans collection), he saw Ginevra di Benci, and 
Lisa, the young third wife of Francesco del Giocondo. 
As we have seen him using incidents of the sacred 
legend, not for their own sake, or as mere subjects 
for pictoral realisation, but as a symbolical language 
for fancies all his own, so now he found a vent for 
his thoughts in taking one of these languid women, 
and raising her as Leda or Pomona, Modesty or 
Vanity, to the seventh heaven of symbolical ex- 
pression. 

^LaGioconda' is, in the truest sfense, Lionardo's 
masterpiece, the revealing instance of his mode of 
thought and work. In suggestiveness, only the 
Melancholia of Dtirer is comparable to it ; and no 
crude symbolism disturbs the effect of its subdued 
and graceful mystery. We all know the face and 
hands of the figure, set in its marble chair, in that 
cirque of fantastic rocks, as in some faint light under 
sea. Perhaps of all ancient pictures time has chilled 
it least \ As often happens with works in which 



^ Yet for Yasari there was some further magic of crimson in 
the lips and cheeks, lost for us. 



VI. LIONARDO DA VINCI. 117 

invention seems to reach its limit, there is an 
element in it given to, not invented by, the 
master. In that inestimable folio of drawings, once 
in the possession of Vasari, were certain designs 
by Verrocchio, faces of such impressive beauty that 
Lionardo in his boyhood copied them many times. 
It is hard not to connect with these designs of 
the elder by-past master, as with its germinal prin- 
ciple, the unfathomable smile, always with a touch 
of something sinister in it, which plays over aU 
Lionardo^s work. Besides, the picture is a portrait. 
From childhood we see this image defining itself 
on the fabric of his dreams ; and but for express 
historical testimony, we might fancy that this was 
but his ideal lady, embodied and beheld at last. 
What was the relationship of a living Florentine 
to this creature of his thought ? By what strange 
affinities had she and the dream grown thus apart, 
yet so closely together ? Present from the first, 
incorporeal in Lionardo^s thought, dimly traced in 
the designs of Verrocchio, she is found present at 
last in II Giocondo's house. That there is much 
of mere portraiture in the picture is attested by 
the legend that by artificial means, the presence of 
mimes and flute-players, that subtle expression was 
protracted on the face. Again, was it in four years 
and by renewed labour never really completed, or in 



118 THE RENAISSANCE. ti. 

four months and as by stroke of magic, that the 
image was projected ? 

The presence that thus so strangely rose beside 
the waters is expressive of what in the ways of a 
thousand years man had come to desire. Hers is 
the head upon which all *the ends of the world 
are come/ and the eyelids are a little weary. It 
, / is a beauty wrought out from within upon the 
flesh, the deposit, little cell by cell, of strange 
thoughts and fantastic reveries and exquisite 
passions. Set it for a moment beside one of those 
white Greek goddesses or beautiful women of anti- 
quity, and how would they be troubled by this 
beauty, into which the soul with all its maladies 
has passed ? All the thoughts and experience of 
the world have etched and moulded there in that 
which they have of power to refine and make 
expressive the outward form, the animalism of 
Greece, the lust of Kome, the reverie of the 
middle age with its spiritual ambition and imagina- 
tive loves, the return of the Pagan world, the sins 
of the Borgias. She is older than the rocks among 
which she sits ; like the vampire, she has been dead 
many times, and learned the secrets of the grave; 
and has been a diver in deep seas, and keeps their 
fallen day about her; and trafficked for strange 
webs with Eastern merchants; and, as Leda, was 



VI. LIONARDO DA VINCI. 119 

the mother of Helen of Troy, and, as Saint Anne, 
the mother of Mary ; and all this has been to her 
but as the sound of lyres and flutes, and lives 
only in the delicacy with which it has moulded 
the changing lineaments and tinged the eyelids and 
the hands. The fancy of a perpetual life, sweeping 
together ten thousand experiences, is an old one ; 
and modem thought has conceived the idea of 
humanity as wrought upon by, and summing up 
in itself, all modes of thought and life. Certainly 
Lady Lisa might stand as the embodiment of the 
old fancy, the symbol of the modem idea. 

During these years at Florence Lionardo^s history 
is the history of his art ; he himself is lost in the 
bright cloud of it. The outward history begins 
again in 1502, with a wild journey through cen- 
tral Italy, which he makes as the chief engineer of 
Caasar Borgia. The biographer, putting together 
the stray jottings of his manuscripts, may follow 
him through every day of it, up the strange tower 
of Siena, which looks towards Rome, elastic like a 
bent bow, down to the sea-shore at Piombino, each 
place appearing as fitfully as in a fever dream. 

One other great work was left for him to do, a 
work all trace of which soon vanished, * The Battle 
of the Standard,^ in which he had Michelangelo 
for his rival. The citizens of Florence, desiring 



120 THE RENAISSANCE. vi. 

to decorate the walls of the great council chamber, 
had offered the work for competition, and any 
* subject might be chosen from the Florentine wars 
of the fifteenth century. Michelangelo chose for 
his cartoon an incident of the war with Pisa, in 
which the Florentine soldiers, bathing in the Amo, 
are surprised by the sound of trumpets, and run to 
arms. His design has reached us only in an old 
engraving, which perhaps would help us less than 
what we remember of the background of his Holy 
Family in the TJflSzii to imagine in what superhuman 
form, such as might have beguiled the heart of an 
earlier world, those figures may have risen from the 
water. Lionardo chose an incident from the battle 
of Anghiari, in which two parties of soldiers fight 
for a standard. Like Michelangelo's, his cartoon is 
lost, and has come to us only in sketches and a 
fragment of Rubens. Through the accotints given 
we may discern some lust of terrible things in it, 
so that even the horses tore each other with their 
teeth ; and yet one fragment of it, in a drawing of 
his at Florence, is far different — a waving field of 
lovely armour, the chased edgings running like 
lines of sunlight from side to side. Michelangelo 
was twenty-seven years old ; Lionardo more than 
fifty ; and Eafiaelle, then nineteen years old, visit- 
ing Florence for the first time, came and watched 
them as they worked. 



VI. LION A EDO DA VINCI. 121 

We catch a glimpse of him again at Kome in 15 14, 
surrounded by his mirrors and vials and furnaces, 
making strange toys that seemed alive of wax and 
quicksilver. The hesitation which had haunted him 
all through life, and made him like one under a 
spell, was upon him now vsdth double force. No one 
had ever carried political indifferentism farther ; it 
had always been his philosophy to *fly before the 
storm ;' he is for the Sforzas or against them, as 
the tide of their fortime turns. Yet now he was 
suspected by the anti-GaUican society at Rome, of 
French tendencies. It paralysed him to find him- 
self among enemies ; and he turned wholly to 
France, which had long courted him. 

France was about to become an Italy more Italian 
than Italy itself. Francis the First, like Lewis the 
Twelfth before him, was attracted by the finesse of 
Lionardo's work; La Gioconda was already in his 
cabinet, and he ofiered Lionardo the little Ch&teau 
de Clou, with its vineyards and meadows, in the 
soft valley of the Masse, and not too far from the 
great outer sea. M. Ars^ne Houssaye has succeeded 
in giving a pensive local colour to this part of his 
subject, vdth which, as a Frenchman, he could best 
deal. ' A Monsieur Lyonard, peinteur du Roy pour 
Amboyse,^ — so the letter of Francis the First is 
headed. It opens a prospect, one of the most at- 
tractive in the history of art, where, under a strange 



122 THE RENAISSANCE. vi. 

mixture of lights, Italian art dies away as a French 
exotic. M. Houfisaye does but touch it lightly, and 
it would carry us beyond the present essay if we 
allowed ourselves to be attracted by its interest. 

Two questions remain, after jnuch busy antiqua- 
rianism, concerning Lionardo's death — ^the question 
of his religion, and the question whether Francis 
the First was present at the time. They are of 
about equally little importance in the estimate of 
Lionardo's genius. The directions in his will about 
the thirty masses and the great candles for the 
church of Saint Florentin are things of course, their 
real purpose being immediate and practical ; and 
on no theory of religion could these hurried offices 
'; be of much consequence. We forget them in specu- 
lating how one who had been always so desirous 
of beauty, but desired it always in such precise 
and definite forms, as hands or flowers or hair, 
looked forward now into the vague land, and ex- 
perienced the last curiosity. 



JOACHIM DU BI:LLAY. 

In the middle of the sixteenth century, when the 
spirit of the Eenaissance was everywhere and people 
had begun to look back with distaste on the works of 
the middle age, the old Gothic manner had still one 
chance more in borrowing something from the rival 
which was about to supplant it. In this way there 
was produced, chiefly in France, a new and peculiar 
phase of taste with qualities and a charm of its own, 
blending the somewhat attenuated grace of Itahan 
ornament with the general outlines of Northern 
design. It produced Chateau Gaillon — as you may 
still see it in the deUcate engravings of Israel 
Silvestre, a Gothic donjon veiled faintly by a surface 
of delicate Italian traceries — Chenonceaux, Blois, 
Chambord and the church of Brou. In painting 
there came from Italy workmen like Maltre Roux 
and the masters of the school of Fontainebleau, to 
have their later Italian voluptuousness attempered 
by the naive and silvery qualities of the native 
style ; and it was characteristic of these painters that 
they were most successful in painting on glass, that 



124 THE RENAISSANCE. vn. 

art 80 essentially mediaeval. Taking it up where the 
middle age had left it, they found their whole work 
among the last subtleties of colour and line ; and keep- 
ing within the true limits of their material they got 
quite a new order of eflfects from it, and felt their 
way to refinements on colour never dreamed of by 
those older workmen, the glass-painters of Chartres 
or Lemans. What is called the Renaissance in 
AJFrance is thus not so much the introduction of a 
• wholly new taste ready made from Italy, but rather 
the finest and subtlest phase of the middle age 
itself, its last fleeting splendour and temperate Saint 
Martin's summer. In poetry, the Gothic spirit in 
France had produced a thousand songs ; and in the 
Renaissance French poetry too did but borrow some- 
thing to blend with a native growth, and the poems 
of Ronsard, with their ingenuity, their delicately 
figured surfaces, their slightness, their fanciful com- 
binations of rhyme, are but the correlative of the 
traceries of the house of Jacques Coeur at Bourges or 
the * Maison de Justice ' at Rouen. 

There was indeed something in the native French 
taste naturally akin to that Italian finesse. The 
characteristic of French work had always been a 
certain nicety, une netteU remarquahle d* execution. 
In the paintings of Fran9ois Clouet, for example, or 
rather of the Clouets, for there was a whole family of 



vn. JO A CHIM D U BELLA T. 125 

them, painters remarkable for their resistance to 
Italian influences, there is a silveriness of colour 
and a clearness of expression, which distinguish 
them very definitely from their Flemish neighbours, 
Hemling or the Van Eycks. And this nicety is not 
less characteristic of old French poetry. A light, 
aerial delicacy, a simple elegance, une nettete remar- 
qudble d'exScution — these are essential characteristics 
alike of Villon^s poetry, and of the ' Hours of Anne of 
Brittany/ They are characteristic too of a himdred 
French Gothic carvings and traceries. Alike in the 
old Gothic cathedrals and in their counterpart, the 
old Gothic chansons de geste, the rough and ponderous 
mass becomes, as if by passing for a moment into 
happier conditions or through a more gracious 
stratum of air, graceful and refined, like the carved 
ferneries on the granite church at Folgoat, or 
the lines which describe the fair priestly hands of 
Archbishop Turpin in the song of Roland ; although 
below both alike there is a fund of mere Gothic 
strength or heaviness. 

And Villon^s songs and Clouet's painting are like 
these. It is the higher touch making itself felt here 
and there, betraying itself, like nobler blood in a 
lower stock, by a fine line or gesture or expression, 
the turn of a wrist, the tapering of a finger. In 
Ronsard's time that rougher element seemed likely 



126 THE RENAISSANCE, vn. 

to predominate. No one can turn over the pages of 
Rabelais without feeling how much need there was 
of softening, of castigation. To effect this softening 
is the object of the revolution in poetry which is 
connected with Ronsard's name. Casting about for 
the means of thus refining upon and saving the 
character of French literature, he accepted that 
influx of Renaissance taste which, leaving the build- 
ings, the language, the art, the poetry of France, at 
bottom, what they were, old French Gothic still, 
gilds their surfaces with a strange delightful foreign 
aspect, passing over all that Northern land neither 
deeper nor more permanent than a chance effect of 
light. He reinforces, he doubles the French nettetS 
by ItaKan Jlnesse. Thereupon nearly all the force 
and aU the seriousness of French work disappear; 
only the elegance, the aerial touch, the perfect manner 
remain. But this elegance, this manner, this nettetS 
d execution are consummate, and have an unmistake- 
able aesthetic value. 

So the old French chanson, which, like the old 
Northern Gothic ornament, though it sometimes re- 
fined itself into a sort of weird elegance was often 
at bottom something rude and formless, became in 
the hands of Ronsard a Pindaric ode. He gave it 
structure, a sustained system, strophe and antistrophe, 
and taught it a changefulness and variety of metre 



VII. JO A CHIM D U BELLA 7. 127 

which keeps the curiosity always excited, the very 
aspect of which as it lies written on the page carries 
the eye lightly onwards, and of which this is a good 
instance : — 

' Avril, la grace, et le ris 
De Cypris, 
Le flair et la douce haleine ; 
Avril, le parfiim des dieux, 

Qui, des cieux, 
Sentent Todeur de la plaine ; 

C'est toy, courtois et gentil, 

Qui d'exil 
Ketire ces passageres, 
Ces arondelles qui vont, 

Et qui sont 
Du printemps les messageres/ 

That is not by Ronsard, but by Remy Belleau, for 
Ronsard soon came to have a school. Six other 
poets threw in their lot with him in his literary 
revolution — this Remy Belleau, Antoine de Baif, 
Pontus de Tj^ard, Etienne Jodelle, Jean Daurat, and 
lastly Joachim du Bellay ; and with that strange love 
of emblems which is characteristic of the time, which 
covered all the works of Francis the First with the 
salamander, and all the works of Henry the Second 
with the double crescent, and all the works of Anne 
of Brittany with the knotted cord, and so on, they 
called themselves the Pleiad^ seven in all, although 
as happetis with the celestial Pleiad, if you scrutinise 



128 THE RENAISSANCE. vii. 

this constellation of poets more carefully you may 
find there a great number of minor stars. 

The first note of this literary revolution was 
struck by Joachim du Bellay in a pamphlet written 
/ at the early age of twenty-four, which coming to us 
^^' through three centuries seems of yesterday, so full 
is it of those delicate critical distinctions which are 
sometimes supposed peculiar to modem writers. The 
book has for its title La Deffense et Illustration de 
la Langue Franpoyse; and its problem is how to 
illustrate or ennoble the French language, to give it 
lustre. We are accustomed to speak of the varied 
critical and creative movement of the fifteenth and 
sixteenth centuries as the Renaissance^ and because 
we have a single name for it ^ we may sometimes 
fancy that there was more unity in the thing itself 
than there really was. Even the Eeformation, that 
other great movement of the fifteenth and sixteenth 
centuries, had far less unity, far less of combined 
action, than is at first sight supposed; and the 
Eenaissance was infinitely less imited, less conscious 
of combined action, than the Reformation. But if 
anywhere the Renaissance became conscious, as a 
German philosopher might say, if ever it was under- 
stood as a systematic movement by those who took 
part in it, it is in this little book of Joachim du 
BeUay^s, which it is impossible to read without feeling 



VII. JO A GHIM D U BELLA T. 129 

the excitement, the animation of change, of discovery. 
La prose, says M. Sainte-Beuve, chose remarquahle 
et d Vinverse des autres langues, a toujours en le pas 
chez nouSy sur notre poSsie. Du Bellay's prose is 
perfectly transparent, flexible and chaste. In many 
ways it is a more characteristic example of the 
culture of the Pleiad than any of its verse ; and 
one who loves the whole movement of which the 
Pleiad is a part for a weird foreign grace in it, and 
may be looking about for a true specimen of it, 
cannot have a better than Joachim du Bellay and 
this Httle treatise of his. 

Du Bellay's object is to adjust the existing French 
culture to the rediscovered classical culture ; and in 
discussing this problem and developing the theories 
of the Pleiad he has lighted upon many principles 
of permanent truth and applicabihty. There were 
some who despaired of the French language alto- 
gether, who thought it naturally incapable of the 
fulness and elegance of Greek and Latin — cette ele- 
gance et copie qui est en la langue Greque et Ro- 
maine — that science could be adequately discussed 
and poetry nobly written only in the dead languages. 
* Those who speak thus,^ says Du Bellay, * make me 
think of those relics which one may only see through 
a little pane of glass and must not touch with one's 
hands. That is what these people do with all 

K 



130 THE RENAISSANCE. vii. 

branches of culture, which they keep shut up in 
Greek and Latin books, not permitting one to see 
them otherwise, or transport them out of dead words 
into those which are alive, and wing their way daily 
through the mouths of men/ ' Languages/ he says 
again, *are not bom like plants and trees, some 
naturally feeble and sickly, others healthy and 
strong and apter to bear the weight of men's con- 
ceptions, but all their virtue is generated in the 
world of choice and men's free-will concerning them. 
Therefore, I cannot blame too strongly the rashness 
of some of our countrymen, who being anything 
rather than Greeks or Latins, depreciate and reject 
with more than stoical disdain everything written 
in French, nor can I express my surprise at the odd 
opinion of some learned men who think that our 
vulgar tongue is wholly incapable of erudition and 
good Uterature/ 

It was an age of translations. Du Bellay himself 
translated two books of the ^Eneid, and other poetry 
old and new, and there were some who thought that 
the translation of classical literature was the true 
means of ennobling the French language — nousfcmo- 
risons toujours les Strangers. Du Bellay moderates 
their expectations. *I do not believe that one can 
learn the right use of them,' — ^he is speaking of 
figures and ornaments in language — *from trans- 



VII. JOACHIM DU BELL AT. 131 

lations, because it is impossible to reproduce them 
with the same grace with which the original author 
used them. For each language has I know not 
what peculiarity of its own, and if you force yourself 
to express the naturalness, le naify of this in another 
language, observing the law of translation, which is 
not to expatiate beyond the limits of the author 
himself, your words will be constrained, cold and 
ungraceftd;' — then he fixes the test of all good 
translation, — *To prove this read me Demosthenes 
and Homer in Latin, Cicero and Virgil in French, 
and see whether they produce in you the same 
affections which you experience in reading those 
authors in the original/ 

In this effort to ennoble the French language, 
to give it grace, number, perfection, and as painters 
do to their pictures, cette demidre main que nous 
desirous, what Du Bellay is pleading for is his 
mother-tongue, the language, that is,* in which one 
will have the utmost degree of what is moving and 
passionate. He recognised of what force the music 
and dignity of languages are, how they enter into 
the inmost part of things; and in pleading for the 
cultivation of the French language he is pleading 
for no merely scholastic interest, but for freedom, 
impulse, reality, not in literature merely, but in 
daily communion of speech.- After all it was im- 

K 2 



132 THE RENAISSANCE. vii. 

possible to have this impulse in Greek and Latin^ 
dead languages, p^ris et mises en reliquaires de livres. 
By aid of this poor plante et vergette of the French 
language, he must speak delicately, movingly, if he 
is ever to speak so at all ; that, or none, must be for 
him the medium of what he calls, in one of his great 
phrases, le discours fatal des choses mondaines; and 
it is his patriotism not to despair of it ; he sees it 
already, parfait en toute 4Ugance et venuste de 
paroles. 

Du Bellay was bom in the disastrous year 1525, 
the year of the battle of Pavia and the captivity of 
Francis the First. His parents died early, and to 
him, as the youngest of the family, his mother's little 
estate on the Loire side, ce petit Lyrd^ the beloved 
place of his birth descended. He was brought up by 
a brother only a little older than himself; and left 
to themselves the two boys passed their lives in 
day-dreams of military glory. Their education was 
neglected ; * the time of my youth,' says Du Bellay, 
*was lost, like the flower which no shower waters, 
and no hand cultivates.' He was just twenty years 
old when this brother died, leaving Joachim to be 
the guardian of his child. It was with regret, with 
a shrinking feeling of incapacity, that he took upon 
him the burden of this responsibility. Hitherto he 
had looked forward to the profession of a soldier. 



VII. JOACHIM BTJ BELL AY, 133 

hereditary in his family. But at this time a sickness 
attacked him which brought him cruel sufferings 
and seemed likely to be mortal. It was then for tl^e 
first time that he read the Greek and Latin poets. 
These studies came too late to make him what he so 
much desired to be, a trifler in Greek and Latin 
verse, like so many others of his time now forgotten ; 
instead, they made him a lover of his own homely 
native tongue, that poor plante et vergette of the 
French language. It was through this fortimate 
shortcoming in his education that he became national 
and modem, and he learned afterwards to look back 
on that wild garden of his youth with only half 
regret. A certain Cardinal du Bellay was the 
successful man of the family, a man often employed 
in high official affairs. It was to him that the 
thought of Joachim turned when it became necessary 
to choose a profession, and in 1552 he accompanied 
the Cardinal to Rome. He remained there nearly 
five years, burdened with the weight of affairs and 
languishiQg with home-sickness. Yet it was under 
these circumstances that his genius yielded its best 
fruits. From Eome, which to most men of an imagi- 
native temperament like his would have yielded so 
many pleasureable sensations, with all the curiosi- 
ties of the Renaissance still firesh there, his thoughts 
went back painfully, longingly, to the country of 



134 TEE RENAISSANCE. vn. 

the Loire, with its wide expanses of waving com, 
its homely pointed roofs of grey slate, and its far-off 
scent of the sea. He reached home at last, but 
only to die there, quite suddenly, one wintry day, 
at the early age of thirty-five. 

Much of Du Bellay's poetry illustrates rather the 
age and school to which he belonged than his own 
temper and genius. As with the writings of Ronsard 
and the other poets of the Pleiad, its interest depends 
not so much on the impress of individual genius upon 
it, as on the circumstance that it was once poetry d 
la modcy that it is part of the manner of a time, a 
time which made much of manner, and carried it to 
a high degree of perfection. It is one of the decora- 
tions of an age which threw much of its energy into 
the work of decoration. We feel a pensive pleasure 
in seeing these faded decorations, and observing 
how a group of actual men and women pleased 
I themselves long ago. Ronsard's poems are a kind 
i of epitome of his age. Of one side of that age, it is 
true, of the strenuous, the progressive, the serious 
movement, which was then going on, there is little ; 
but of the catholic side, the losing side, the forlorn 
hope, hardly a figure is absent. The Queen of Scots, 
at whose desire Eonsard published his odes, reading 
him in her northern prison, felt that he was bringing 
back to her the true flavour of her early days in the 



VII. JO A GHIM D U BELLA F. 1 35 

court of Catherine at the Louvre, with its exotic 
Italian gaieties. Those who disliked that poetry, 
disliked it because they found that age itself dis- 
tasteful. The poetry of Malherbe came, with its 
sustaiaed style and weighty sentiment, but with 
nothing that set people singiag; and the lovers of 
that poetry saw in the poetry of the Pleiad only the 
latest triunpery of the middle age. But the time 
came when the school of Malherbe too had had its 
day ; and the Romanticists, who in their eagerness 
for excitement, for strange music and imagery, went 
back to the works of the middle age, accepted the 
Pleiad too with the rest ; and in that new middle 
age which their genius has evoked the poetry of 
the Pleiad has found its place. At first, with 
Malherbe, you may find it, like the architecture, the 
whole mode of life, the very dresses of that time, 
— fentastic, faded, rococo. But if you look long 
enough to understand it, to conceive its sentiment, 
you will find that those wanton lines have a spirit 
guiding their caprices. For there is style there ; 
one temper has shaped the whole ; and everything 
that has style, that has been done as no other man or 
age could have done it, as it could never for all our 
trying, be done again, has its true value and in- 
terest. Let us dwell upon it for a moment, and try 
to gather from it that jleur particulieVy that special 



136 TUE RENAISSANCE, vn. 

flower, which Ronsard himself tells us every garden 

has. 

It is poetry not for the people, but for a confined 
circle, for courtiers, great lords and erudite persons, 
people who desire to be humoured, to gratify a 
certain refined voluptuousness they have in them, 
like that of the Roman Emperor who would only 
eat fish far from the sea. Ronsard loves, or dreams 
that he loves, a rare and peculiar type of beauty, hx 
petite pucelle Angeviney with blond hair and dark 
eyes. But he has the ambition not only of being 
a courtier and a lover, but a great scholar also ; he is 
anxious about orthography, the letter e Grecquey the 
true spelling of Latin names in French writing, and 
the restoration of the i voyelle en sa premidre libertS. 
His poetry is full of quaint remote learning. He is 
just a little pedantic, true always to his own express 
judgment that to be natural is not enough for one 
who in poetry desires to produce work worthy of 
immortality. And therewithal a certain number of 
Greek words, which charmed Ronsard and his circle 
by their gayness and nicety, and a certain air of 
foreign elegance about them, crept into the French 
language ; and there were other strange words which 
the poets of the Pleiad forged for themselves, and 
which had but an ephemeral existence. 

With this was mixed the desire to taste a more 



VII. JO A CHIM D U BELLA Y, 1 37 

exquisite and various music than that of the older 
French verse, or of the classical poets. The music 
of the measured . scanned verse of Latin and Greek 
poetry is one thing ; the music of the rhymed, im- 
scanned verse of Villon and the old French poets, the 
po6sie chantee, is another. To unite together these 
two kinds of music in a new school of French poetry, 
to make verse which would scan and rhyme as well, 
to search out and harmonise the measure of every 
syllable and unite it to the swift, flitting, swallow- 
like motion of rhyme, to penetrate their poetry with 
a double music, — ^this was the ambition of the 
Pleiad. They are insatiable of music, they cannot 
have enough of it ; they desire a music of greater 
compass perhaps than words can possibly yield, to 
drain out the last drops of sweetness which a certain 
note or accent contains. 

This eagerness for music is almost the only seri- 
ous thing in the poetry of the Pleiad ; and it was 
Goudimel, the severe and protestant Goudimel, who 
set Eonsard's songs to music. But except in this 
these poets are never serious. Mythology, which 
with the great Italians had been a motive so weighty 
and severe, becomes with them a mere toy. That 
*lord of terrible aspect,* Amor, has become the 
petit enfant Amour. They are full of fine railleries ; 
they delight in diminutives, ondelettCyj .fondelette, 



138 THE RENAISSANCE. vii. 

doucelettey Cassandrette. Their loves are only half 
real, a vain effort to prolong the imaginative loves 
of the middle age beyond their natural lifetime. 
They write love -poems for hire. Like the people 
in Boccaccio's * Decameron,' they form a party who 
in an age of great troubles, losses, anxieties, amuse 
themselves with art, poetry, intrigue ; but they amuse 
themselves with wonderful elegance, and sometimes 
their gaiety becomes satiric, for as they play, real 
passions insinuate themselves, at least the reality of 
death ; their dejection at the thought of leaving le 
beau sejour du commun jour is expressed by them 
with almost wearisome reiteration. But with this 
sentiment too they are able to trifle ; the imagery of 
death serves for a delicate ornament, and they weave 
into the airy nothingness of their verses their trite 
reflections on the vanity of life; just as the grotesques 
of the charnel-house nest themselves together with 
birds and flowers and the fancies of the pagan 
mythology in the traceries of the architecture of that 
time, which wantons in its delicate arabesques with 
the images of old age and death. 

Bonsard became deaf at sixteen, and it was this 
which finally determined him to be a man of letters 
instead of a diplomatist ; and it was significant, one 
might fancy, of a certain premature agedness, and of 
the tranquil temperate sweetness appropriate to that, 



VII. JO A CHIM D V BELLA 7. 1 39 

in the school of poetry which he founded. Its charm 
is that of a thing not vigorous or original, but full 
of the grace that comes of long study and reiterated 
refinements, and many steps repeated, and many 
angles worn down, with an exquisite faintness, a 
fadeur exquise, a certain tenuity and caducity, as 
for those who can bear nothing vehement or strong ; 
for princes weary of love, like Francis the First, or 
of pleasure, like Henry the Third, or of action like 
Henry the Fourth. Its merits are those of the old, 
grace and finish, perfect in minute detail. For 
these people are a little jaded, and have a con- 
stant desire for a subdued and delicate excitement, 
to warm their creeping fancy a little. They love a 
constant change of rhyme in poetry, and in their 
houses that strange fantastic interweaving of thin 
reed-like lines, which are a kind of rhetoric in archi- 
tecture. 

But the poetry of the Pleiad is true not only to 
the physiognomy of its age, but also to its country, 
that pays du Vendomois, the names and scenery of 
which so often occur in it ; the great Loire, with its 
spaces of white sand ; the little river Loir ; the 
heathy, upland country, Le Bocage, with its scattered 
pools of water and waste road-sides ; La Beauce, the 
granary of France, where the vast rolling fields of 
corn seem to anticipate the great western sea itself. 



140 THE RENAISSANCE. vii. 

It is full of the traits of that country. We see Du 
Bellay and Ronsard gardening or hunting with their 
dogs, or watch the pastimes of a rainy day ; and with 
this is connected a domesticity, a homeliness and 
simple goodness, by which this Northern country 
gains upon the South. They have the love of the 
aged for warmth, and understand the poetry of 
winter ; for they are not far from the Atlantic, and 
the west wind which comes up from it, turning the 
poplars white, spares not this new Italy in France. 
So the fireside often appears, with the pleasures of 
winter, about the vast emblazoned chimneys of the 
time, and a bonhomie as of httle children or old 
people. 

It is in Du Bellay's * Olive,' a collection of sonnets 
in praise of a half-imaginary lady, Sonnetz a la louange 
d^ Olive, that these characteristics are most abundant. 
Here is a perfectly crystallised specimen : — 

* D'amour, de grace, et de haulte valeur 

Les feux divins estoient ceinctz et lea cieulx 
S*estoient vestuz d'un manteau precieux 
A raiz ardens de diverse couleur : 

Tout estoit plein de beauts, de bonheur, 
La mer tranquille, et le vent gracieulx, 
Quand celle la nasquit en ces bas lieux 
Qui a pill^ du monde tout rhonneur. 

Eir prist son teint des l)eaux lyz blanchissans, 
Son chef de Tor, ses deux levres des rozes, 
Et du soleil ses yeux resplandissans : 



VII. JO A CHIM D U BELLA Y. 141 

Le ciel usant de liberality, 

Mist en Tesprit ses semences encloses, 
Son nom des Dieux prist I'immortalit^.' 

That he is thus a characteristic specimen of the 
poetical taste of that age, is indeed Du Bellay's chief 
interest. But if his work is to have the highest 
sort of interest, if it is to do something more than 
satisfy curiosity, if it is to have an aesthetic as dis- 
tinct from an historic value, it is not enough for a 
poet to have been the true child of his age, to have 
conformed to its aesthetic conditions, and by so con- 
forming to have charmed and stimulated that age ; 
it is necessary that there should be perceptible in 
his work something individual, inventive, unique, 
the impress there of the writer's own temper and 
personality. This impress M. Sainte-Beuve thought 
he found in the ' Antiquites de Rome ' and the ' Re- 
grets,' which he ranks as what has been called poSsie 
tntime, that intensely modem sort of poetry in which 
the writer has for his aim the portrayal of his own 
most intimate moods, to take the reader into his con- 
fidence. That generation had other instances of this 
intimacy of sentiment : Montaigne's Essays are ful 1 
of it, the carvings of the church of Brou are full of 
it. M. Sainte-Beuve has perhaps exaggerated the in- 
fluence of this quality in Du Bellay's * Regrets' ; but 
the very name of the book hq^s a touch of Rousseau 



142 THE RENAISSANCE. vii. 

about it, and reminds one of a whole generation of 
self-pitying poets in modem times. It was in the 
atmosphere of Rome, to him so strange and mournful, 
that these pale flowers grew up ; for that journey to 
Italy, which he deplored as the greatest misfortune 
of his life, put him in fuU possession of his talent, 
and brought out all its originality. And in effect 
you do find intimitSy intimacy, here. The trouble 
of his life is analysed, and the sentiment of it con- 
veyed directly to our minds ; not a great sorrow or 
passion, but only the sense of loss in passing days, 
the ennui of a dreamer who has to plunge into the 
world's affairs, the opposition between life and the 
ideal, a longing for rest, nostalgia, homesickness — 
that preeminently childish, but so suggestive sorrow, 
as significant of the final regret of all human crea- 
tures for the familiar earth and limited sky. The 
feeling for landscape is often described as a modem 
one ; still more so is that for antiquity, the sentiment 
of ruins. Du Bellay has this sentiment. The dura- 
tion of the hard sharp outlines of things is a grief 
to him, and passing his wearisome days among the 
ruins of ancient Rome, he is consoled by the thought 
that all must one day end, by the sentiment of the 
grandeur of nothingness, la grandeur du rien. With 
a strange touch of far-off mysticism, he thinks that 
le grand tout itself, into which all things pass, ought 



vn. JO A CHIM D U BELLA T. 143 

itself sometimes to perish and pass away. Nothing 
less can relieve his weariness. From the stately 
aspects of Kome his thoughts went back continually 
to France, to the smoking chimneys of his little 
village, the longer twilight of the North, la douceur 
Angevine ; yet not so much to the real France, we 
may be sure, with its dark streets aad roofs of 
rough-hewn slate, as to that other country with 
slenderer towers, and more winding rivers, and trees 
like flowers, and softer sunshine on more gracefully- 
proportioned fields and ways, which the fancy of the 
exile, and the pilgrim, and of the schoolboy far from 
home, and of those kept at home unwillingly, every- 
where builds up before or behind them. 

He came home at last through the Grisons, by 
slow journeys, and there in the cooler air of his own 
country, under its skies of milkier blue, the sweetest 
flower of his genius sprang up. There have been 
poets whose whole fame has rested on one poem, as 
Gray's on the * Elegy in a Country Churchyard,* or 
Konsard^s, as many critics have thought, on the 
eighteen lines of one famous ode. Du Bellay has 
almost been the poet of one poem, and this one 
poem of his is an Italian thing transplanted into 
that green country of Anjou; out of the Latin verses 
of Naugerius, into French; but it is a thing in 
which the matter is almost nothing, and the form 



144 THE RENAISSANCE. vii. 

almost everything; and the form of the poem as 
it stands, written in old French, is all Du Bellay's 
own. It is a song which the winnowers are sup- 
posed to sing as they winnow the com, and they 
invoke the winds to lie lightly on the grain. 

FUN VANNEUR DE BLE AUX VENTS \ 

A vouB trouppe legbre 
Qui d'aile passagbre 
Par le monde volez, 
Et dW sifflant murmure 
L'ombrageuse verdure 
Doulcement esbranlez, 

J'ofire ces violettes, 
Ces lis & ces fleurettes, 
Et ces roses icy, 
Ces vermeillettes roses 
Sont freschement ^closes, 
Et ces oelliets aussi. 

De vostre doulce haleine 
Eventez ceste plaine 
Eventez ce sejour : 
Ce pendant que j'ahanne 
A mon h\€ que je vanne 
A la chalenr du jour. 

That has in the highest degree the qualities, the 
value of the whole Pleiad school of poetry, of the 



^ An excellent translation of this and some other poems of the 
Pleiad may be found in • Ballads and Lyrics of Old France/ by 
A. Lang. 



VII. JO A CHIM D U BELLA F. 145 

whole phase of taste from which that school derives, 
a certam silvery grace of fancy, nearly all the plea- 
sure of which is in the surprise at the happy and 
dexterous way in which a thing slight in itself is 
handled. The sweetness of it is by no means to be 
got at by crushing, as you crush wild herbs to get 
at their perfume. One seems to hear the measured 
falling of the fans with a child's pleasure on coming 
across the incident for the first time in one of those 
great bams of Du Bellay's own country, La Beauce^ 
the granary of France. A sudden light transfigures 
a trivial thing, a weather-vane, a wind-mill, a winnow- 
ing flail, the dust in the bam door ; a moment, — and 
the thing has vanished, because it was pure effect ; 
but it leaves a reHsh behind it, a longing that th^ 
accident may happen again. 



WINCKELMANN\ 

Goethe's fragments of art criticism contain a 
few pages of strange pregnancy on the character of 
Winckehnann. He speaks of the teacher who had 
made his career possible, but whom he had never 
seen, as of an abstraxjt type of cultm-e, consum- 
mate, tranquil, withdrawn already into the region 
of ideals, yet retaining colour from the incidents 
of a passionate intellectual life. He classes him 
with certain works of art possessing an inexhaustible 
gift of suggestion, to which criticism may return 
again and again with imdiminighed freshness. He- 
gel, in his Lectures on the Philosophy of Art, esti- 
mating the work of his predecessors, has also passed 
a remarkable judgment on Winckehnann's writings. 
* Winckelmann by contemplation of the ideal works 
of the ancients received a sort of inspiration through 
which he opened a new sense for the study of art. 
He is to be regarded as one of those who in the 
sphere of art have known how to initiate a^ new 
organ for the human spirit/ That it has given a 



* Reprinted from the ' Westminster Review,' for January, 1857. 



vnr. WINCKELMANN. 147 

new sense, that it has laid open a new organ, is 
the highest that can be said of any critical effort. 
It is interesting then to ask what kind of man 
it was who thus laid open a new organ? Under 
what conditions was that effected? 

Johann Joachim Winckelmann was born at Sten- 
dal, in Brandenburg, in the year 171 7. The child 
of a poor tradesman, he passed through many 
struggles in early youth, the memory of which ever 
remained in him as a fitful cause of dejection. In 
1 763, in the full emancipation of his spirit, looking 
over the beautiful Roman prospect, he writes, * One 
gets spoiled here ; but God owed me this ; in my 
youth I suffered too much/ Destined to assert and 
interpret the charm of the Hellenic spirit, he served 
first a painful apprenticeship in the tarnished in- 
tellectual world of Germany in the earlier half of 
the eighteenth century. Passing out of that into 
the happy light of the antique he had a sense of 
exhilaration almost physical. We find him as a 
child in the dusky precincts of a German school 
hungrily feeding on a few colourless books. The 
master of this school grows blind ; Winckelmann 
becomes his famulus. The old man would have 
had him study theology. Winckelmann, free of the 
master's library, chooses rather to become familiar 

with the Greek classics. Herodotus and Homer win, 

L 2 



148 THE RENAISSANCE, viii. 

with their * vowelled' Greek, his warmest cult. 
Whole nights of fever axe devoted to them ; dis- 
turbing dreams of an Odyssey of his own come to 
him. * n se sentit attire vers le Midi, avec ardeur/ 
Madame de Stael says of him ; ' on retrouve en- 
core souvent dans les imaginations AUemandes 
quelques traces de cet amour du soleil, de cette 
fatigue du Nord, qui entralna les peuples septen- 
trionaux dans les contrees m^ridionales. Un beau 
ciel fait naltre des sentiments semblables k Tamour 
de la patrie/ 

To most of us, after all our steps towards it, the 
antique world, in spite of its intense outlines, its per- 
fect self-expression, still remains faint and remote. 
To him, closely Kmited except on the side of the 
ideal, building for his dark poverty a house not 
made with hands, it early came to seem more real 
than the present. In the fantastic plans of travel 
continually passing through his mind, to Eygpt, for 
instance, and France, there seems always to be 
rather a wistful sense of something lost to be re- 
gained, than the desire of discovering anything new. 
Goethe has told us how, in his eagerness to handle 
the antique, he was interested in the insignificant 
vestiges of it which the neighbourhood of Strasburg 
contained. So we hear of Winckelmann's boyish 
antiquarian wanderings among the ugly Branden- 



VIII. WINCKELMANN. 149 

burg sandhills. Such a conformity between himself 
and Winckelmann, Goethe would have gladly 
noted. 

At twenty-one he enters the University of Halle, 
to study theology, as his friends desire ; instead he 
becomes the enthusiastic translator of Herodotus. 
The condition of Greek learning in German schools 
and universities had fallen, and Halle had no pro- 
fessors who could satisfy his sharp, intellectual 
craving. Of his professional education he always 
speaks with scorn, claiming to have been his own 
teacher from first to last. His appointed teachers did 
not perceive that a new source of culture was within 
their hands. * Homo vagus et inconstans,' one of 
them pedantically reports of the future pilgrim to 
Rome, unaware on which side his irony was whetted. 
When professional education confers nothing but 
irritation on a Schiller, no one ought to be surprised ; 
for Schiller and such as he are primarily spiritual 
adventurers. But that Winckelmann, the votary of 
the gravest of intellectual traditions, should get 
nothing but an attempt at suppression from the pro- 
fessional guardians of learning, is what may well 
surprise us. 

In 1743 he became master of a school at See- 
hausen. This was the most wearisome period of 
his life. Notwithstanding a success in dealing with 



A.' 



150 THE RENAISSANCE. rm. 

children, which seems to testify to something simple 
and primeval in his nature, he found the work of 
teaching very depressing. Engaged in this work, 
he writes that he still has within a longing desire 
to attain to the knowledge of beauty ; ' sehnlich 
wiinschte zur Kenntniss des Schonen zu gelangen.' 
He had to shorten his nights, sleeping only four 
hours^ to gain time for reading. And here Winckel- 
mann made a step forward in culture. He multiplied 
his intellectual force by detaching from it all flaccid 
interests. He renounced mathematics and law, in 
which his reading had been considerable, all but the 
literature of the arts. Nothing was to enter into his 
life unpenetrated by its central enthusiasm. At this 
y, I time he undergoes the charm of Voltaire. Voltaire 
belongs to that flimsier, more artificial, classical tra- 
dition, which Winckelmann was one day to supplant 
by the clear ring, the eternal outline of the genuine 
antique. But it proves the authority of such a gift 
as Voltaire^ that it allures and wins even those born 
to supplant it. Voltaire's impression on Winckelmann 
was never effaced ; and it gave him a consideration 
for French literature which contrasts with his con- 
tempt for the literary products of Germany. Ger- 
man literature transformed, siderealised, as we see it 
in Goethe, reckons Winckelmann among its initiators. 
But Germany at that time presented nothing in 



VIII. WINGKELMANN. 151 

which he could have anticipated ^Iphigenie' and the 
formation of an effective classical tradition in German 
literature. 

Under this purely literary influence, Winckelmann 
protests against Christian Wolf and the philosophers. 
Goethe, in speaking of this protest, alludes to his 
own obligations to Emmanuel Kant. Kant's influ- 
ence over the culture of Goethe, which he tells us 
could not have been resisted by him without loss, 
consisted in a severe limitation to the concrete. But 
he adds, that in bom antiquaries like Winckelmann, 
constant handling of the antique, with its eternal 
outline, maintains that limitation as effectually as a 
critical philosophy. Plato however, saved so often 
for his redeeming literary manner, is excepted from 
Winckelmann's proscription of the philosophers. The 
modem most often meets Plato on that side which 
seems to pass beyond Plato into a world no longer 
pagan, based on the conception of a spiritual life. 
But the element of aflSnity which he presents to 
Winckelmann is that which is wholly Greek, and 
alien from the Christian world, represented by that 
group of brilliant youths in the Lysis, still imin- 
fected by any spiritual sickness, finding the end of 
all endeavour in the aspects of the human form, the 
continual stir and motion of a comely human life. 

This new-foimd interest in Plato's writings could 



162 THE RENAISSANCE, ym. 

not fail to increase hie desire to visit the countries 
of the classical tradition. ' It is my misfortune/ he 
writes, * that I was not bom to great place, wherein 
I might have had cultivation and the opportunity of 
following my instinct and forming myself/ Prob- 
ably the purpose of visiting Rome was already 
formed, and he silently preparing for it. Count 
Biinau, the author of an historical work then of note, 
had collected at Nothenitz, near Dresden, a valuable 
library, now part of the library of Dresden. In 1784 
Winckelmann wrote to Biinau in halting French : 
' He is emboldened,' he says, ' by Biinau's indul- 
gence for needy men of letters.' He desires only to 
devote himself to study, having never allowed him- 
self to be dazzled by favourable prospects in the 
church. He hints at his doubtful position * in a 
metaphysical age, when humane literature is trampled 
under foot. At present,' he goes on, * Uttle value 
is set on Greek literatmre, to which I have devoted 
myself so far as I could penetrate, when good books 
are so scarce and expensive.' Finally, he desires a 
place in some comer of Biinau's library. * Perhaps 
at some future time I shall become more useful 
to the public, if, drawn from obscurity in whatever 
way, I can find means to maintain myself in the 
capital.' 

Soon after we find Winckelmann in the library 



vin. WINGKELMANN. 153 

at Nothenitz. Thence he made many visits to the 
collection of antiques at Dresden. He became ac- 
quainted with many artists, above all with Oeser, 
Goethe's future friend and master, who, uniting a 
high culture with a practical knowledge of art, was 
fitted to minister to Winckelmann's culture. And 
now there opened for him a new way of communion 
with the Greek life. Hitherto he had handled the 
words only of Greek poetry, stirred indeed and 
roused by them, yet divining beyond the words 
an unexpressed pulsation of sensuous life. Suddenly 
he is in contact with that life still fervent in the 
relics of plastic art. Filled as our culture is with 
the classical spirit, we can hardly imagine how 
deeply the human mind was moved when at the 
Eenaissance, in the midst of a frozen world, the 
buried fire of ancient art rose up from under the 
soil. Winckelmann here reproduces for us the 
earlier sentiment of the Eenaissance. On a sudden 
the imagination feels itself free. How facile and 
direct, it seems to say, is this life of the senses and 
the understanding when once we have apprehended 
it ! That is the more liberal life we have been 
seeking so long, so near to us all the while. How 
mistaken and roundabout have been our efforts to 
reach it by mystic passion and religious reverie ; 
how they have deflowered the flesh \ how little 



154 THE RENAISSANCE. vm. 

they have emancipated us! Hermione melts from 
her stony posture, and the lost proportions of life 
right themselves. There, is an instance of Winckel- 
mann's tendency to escape from abstract theory to 
intuition, to the exercise of sight and touch. Les- 
sing, in the Laocoon, has finely theorised on the 
relation of poetry to sculpture ; and philosophy can 
give us theoretical reasons why not poetry but sculp- 
ture should be the most sincere and exact expres- 
sion of the Greek ideal. By a happy, unperplexed 
dexterity, Winckelmann solves the question in the 
concrete. It is what Goethe calls his * Gewahrwerden 
der griechischen Kunst/ his Jinding of Greek art. 

Through the tumultuous richness of Goethe's 

culture, the influence of Winckelmann is always 

discernible as the strong regulative under-current 

I of a clear antique motive. * One learns nothing 

7 1 from him,' he says to Eckermann, * but one becomes 
i something.' If we ask what the secret of this 

I influence was, Goethe himself wiU tell us : elasticity, 
wholeness, intellectual integrity. And yet these 
expressions, because they fit Goethe, with his uni- 
versal culture, so well, seem hardly to describe the 
narrow, exclusive interest of Winckelmann. Doubt- 
less Winckelmann's perfection is a narrow perfection; 
his feverish nursing of the one motive of his life 
is a contrast to Goethe's various energy. But what 



VIII. WINGKELMANN. 155 

affected Goethe, what instructed him and ministered 
to his culture, was the integrity, the truth to its 
type of the given force. The development of this 
force was • the single interest of Winckelmann, 
unembarrassed by anything else in him. Other 
interests, religious, moral, political, those slighter 
talents and motives not supreme, which in most 
men are the waste part of nature, and drain away 
their vitality, he plucked out and cast from him. 
The protracted longing of his youth is not a vague 
romantic longing ; he knows what he longs for, what 
he wills. Within its severe limits his enthusiasm 
burns like lava. * You know,* says Lavater, speak- 
ing of Winckelmann s countenance, * that I consider 
ardour and indifference by no means incompatible in 
the same character. If ever there was a striking 
instance of that union, it is in the coimtenance before 
us.' 'A lowly childhood,' says Goethe, * insufficient 
instruction in youth, broken, distracted studies in 
early manhood ; the burden of school-keeping ! He 
was thirty years old before he enjoyed a single 
favour of fortune, but as soon as he had attained 
to an adequate condition of freedom, he appears 
before us consummate and entire, complete in the 
ancient sense.' 

But his hair is turning grey, and he has not yet 
reached the south. The Saxon court had become 



* 



166 THE RENAISSANCE. vm. 

Eoman Catholic, and the way to favour at Dresden was 
through Romish ecclesiastics. Probably the thought 
of a profession of the Romish religion was not new 
to Winckelmann. At one time he had thought of 
begging his way to Rome, from cloister to cloister, 
under the pretence of a disposition to change his 
faith. In 1751 the papal nuncio, Archinto, was 
one of the visitors at Nothenitz. He suggested 
Rome as a stage for Winckelmann^s attainments, and 
held out the hope of a place in the papal library. 
Cardinal Passionei, charmed with Winckehnann^s 
beautiful Greek writing, was ready to play the part 
of Maecenas, on condition that the necessary change 
should be made. Winckelmann accepted the bribe 
and visited the nuncio at Dresden. Unquiet still 
at the word * profession,* not without a struggle, he 
joined the Romish Church, July the eleventh, 1754. 
Goethe boldly pleads that Winckelmann was a 
pagan, that the landmarks of Christendom meant 
'5 nothing to him. It is clear that he intended to 
deceive no one by his disguise ; fears of the in- 
quisition are sometimes visible during his life in 
Rome ; he entered Rome notoriously with the works 
of Voltaire in his possession ; the thought of what 
Bunau might be thinking of him seems to have 
been his greatest difficulty. On the other hand, he 
may have had a sense of something grand, primeval, 



$ 



vm. WINCKELMA NN. 167 

pagan, in the Catholic religion. Casting the dust 
of Protestantism off his feet — Protestantism which 
at best had been one of the ennuis of his youth — ^'' 
he might reflect that while Rome had reconciled/ 
itself to the Benaissance, the Protestant principle 
in art had cut off Germany from the supreme 
tradition of beauty. And yet to that transparent 
nature, with its simplicity as of the earlier world, 
the loss of absolute sincerity must have been a 
real loss. Goethe understands that Winckelmann 
had made this sacrifice. He speaks of the doubtful 
charm of renegadism as something like that which 
belongs to a divorced woman, or to *Wildbret mit 
einer kleinen Andeutung von Faulniss.^ Certainly 
at the bar of the highest criticism Winckelmann is 
more than absolved. The insincerity of his religious 
profession was only one incident of a culture in 
which the moral instinct, like the religious or po- 
litical, was lost in the artistic. But then the artistic 
interest was that by desperate faithfulness to which 
Winckelmann was saved from the mediocrity which, 
breaking through no bounds, moves ever in a 
bloodless routine, and misses its one chance in the 
life of the ispirit aiid the intellect. There have been 
instances of culture developed by every high motive 
in turn, ai^d yet intense at every point; and the 
aim of our culture should be to attain not only as 



168 THE RENAISSANCE. vm. 

intense but as complete a ]ife as possible. But often 
the higher life is only possible at all on condition of 
a selection of that in which one's motive is native 
and strong ; and this selection involves the renuncia- 
tion of a crown reserved for others. Which is better ; 
to lay open a new sense, to initiate a new organ 
for the human spirit, or to cultivate many types 
of perfection up to a point which leaves us still 
beyond the range of their transforming power? 
Savonarola is one type of success ; Winckelmann is 
another; criticism can reject neither, because each 
is true to itself. Winckelmann himself explains the 
motive of his life when he says, 'It wiU be my 
highest reward if posterity acknowledges that I 
have written worthily.' 

For a time he remained at Dresden. There his 
first book appeared, * Thoughts on the Imitation 
of Greek Works of Art in Painting and Sculpture.^ 
Full of obscurities as it was, obscurities which 
baffled but did not offend Goethe when he first 
turned to art-criticism, its purpose was direct, 
an appeal from the artificial classicism of the 
day to the study of the antique. The book 
was well received, and a pension was supplied 
through the king's confessor. In September, 1755, 
he started for Rome, in the company of a young 
Jesuit. He was introduced to Raphael Mengs, a 



VIII. WINCKELMANN. 159 

painter then of note, and found a home near him, 
in the artists' quarter, in a place where he could 
' overlook far and wide the eternal city/ At first 
he was perplexed with the sense of being a stranger 
on what was to him native soil. * Unhappily,' he 
cries in French, often selected by him as the vehicle 
of strong feeling, * I am one of those whom the 
Greeks call o^ifiaQel^. I have come into the world 
and into Italy too late.' More than thirty years 
afterwards, Goethe also, after many aspirations and 
severe preparation of mind, visited Italy. In early 
manhood, just as he, too, was finding Greek art, 
the rumour of that high artist's life of Winckelmann 
in Italy had strongly moved him. At Kome, spend- 
ing a whole year drawing from the antique, in 
preparation for * Iphigenie,' he finds the stimulus of 
Winckelmann's memory ever active. Winckelmann s 
Eoman life was simple, primeval, Greek. His 
delicate constitution permitted him the use only of 
bread and wine. Condemned by many as a renegade, 
he had no desire for places of honour, but only to 
see his merits acknowledged and existence assured 
to him. He was simple, without being niggardly ; 
he desired to be neither poor nor rich. 

Winckelmann's first years in Kome present all 
the elements of an intellectual situation of the 
highest interest. The beating of the intellect against 



160* THE RENAISSANCE, viii. 

its bars, the sombre aspect, the alien traditions, the 
still barbarous literature of Germany, are far off; 
before him are adeqiiate conditions of culture, the 
sacred soil itself, the first tokens of the advent of 
the new German literature, with its broad horizons, 
its boundless intellectual promise. Dante, passing 
from the darkness of the ' Inferno,' is filled with a 
sharp and joyM sense of light which mates him 
deal with it in the opening of the * Purgatorio' in a 
wonderfiilly touching and penetrative way. Hel- 
lenism, which is pre-eminently intellectual light — 
modem culture may have more colour, the mediaeval 
spirit greater heat and profundity, but Hellenism 
is pre-eminent for light — has always been most 
successfully handled by those who have crept into 
it out of an intellectual world in which the sombre 
elements predominate. So it had been in the ages 
of the Renaissance. This repression, removed at 
last, gave force and glow to Winckelmann's native 
affinity to the Hellenic spirit. ' There had been 
/|i known before him,' says Madame de Stael, ' learned 
men who might be consulted like books : but no one 
had, if I may say so, made himself a pagan jfor the 
purpose of penetrating antiquity/ * On exScute mal 
ce qu^on ria pas coufu soi-^TiSme ^ ' — ^words spoken 



^ Word^ of Charlotte Corjiay before the Convention, 



VIII. WINCKELMANN. 161 

on 80 high an occasion — are true in their measure of 
every genuine enthusiasm. Enthusiasm — that, in 
the broad Platonic sense of the * Phsedrus/ was the 
secret of his divinatory power over the Hellenic 
world. This enthusiasm, dependent as it is to a 
great degree on bodily temperament, gathering into 
itself the stress of the nerves and the heat of the 
blood, has a power of reinforcing the purer motions 
of the intellect with an almost physical excitement. 
That his aJBSnity with Hellenism was not merely 
intellectual, that the subtler threads of temperament 
were inwoven in it, is proved by his romantic, 
fervid friendships with young men. He has known, 

he says, many young men more beautiftd than 

• 

Guide's archangel. These friendships, bringing him 
in contact with the pride of human form, and stain- 
ing his thoughts with its bloom, perfected his recon- 
ciliation with the spirit of Greek sculpture. A 
letter on taste, addressed from Rome to a young 
nobleman, Friedrich von Berg, is the record of such 
a friendship. 

' I shall excuse my delay,^ he begins, * in fulfilling 
my promise of an essay on the taste for beauty in 
works of art, in the words of Pindar. He says to 
Agesidamus, a youth of Locri, ISea re koKop^ wpa re 
KCKpafjiivov^ whom he had kept waiting for an in- 
tended ode, that a debt paid with usury is the end 



162 THE RENAISSANCE. viii. 

of reproach. This may win your good-nature on 
behalf of my present essay, which has turned out 
far more detailed and circumstantial than I had at 
first intended. 

*It is from yourself that the subject is taken. 
Our intercourse has been short, too short both for 
you and me; but the first time I saw you the af- 
finity of our spirits was revealed to me. Your 
culture proved that my hope was not groundless, 
and I found in a beautiftd body a soul created for 
nobleness, gifted with the sense of beauty. My 
parting fi:*om you was, therefore, one of the most 
painful in my life ; and that this feeling continues 
our common friend is witness, for your separation 
from me leaves me no hope of seeing you again. 
Let this essay be a memorial of our friendship, 
which, on my side, is free from every selfish motive, 
and ever remains subject and dedicate to yourself 
alone.' 

The following passage is characteristic : — 

* As it is confessedly the beauty of man which is 

I to be conceived under one general idea, so I have 

*- \ noticed that those who are observant of beauty only 

in women, and are moved little or not at all by the 

beauty of men, seldom have an impartial, vital, 

inborn instinct for beauty in art. To such persons 

the beauty of Greek art will ever seem wanting. 



VIII. WINCKELMANF. 163 

because its supreme beauty is rather male than 
female. But the beauty of art demands a higher 
sensibility than the beauty of nature, because the 
beauty of art, like tears shed at a play, gives no 
pain, is without life, and must be awakened and 
repaired by culture. Now, as the spirit of culture 
is much more ardent in youth than in manhood, the 
instinct of which I am speaking must be exercised 
and directed to what is beautiful before that age is 
reached at which one would be afraid to ^confess 
that one had no taste for it.' 

Certainly, of that beauty of living form which 
regulated Winckelmann's friendships, it could not 
be said that it gave no pain. One notable friend- 
ship, the fortune of which we may trace through 
his letters, begins with an antique, chivalrous letter 
in French, and ends noisily in a burst of angry fire. 
Far from reaching the quietism, the bland indiffer- 
ence of art, such attachments are nevertheless more 
susceptible than any others of equal strength of a 
purely intellectual culture. Of passion, of physical 
stir, they contain just so much as stimulates the eye 
to the last lurking delicacies of colour and form. 
These friendships, often the caprices of a moment, 
make Winckelmann's letters, with their troubled 
colouring, an instructive but bizarre addition to the 

* History of Art/ that shrine of grave and mellow 

M 2 



164 THE RENAISSANCE. vm. 

light for the mute Olympian family. Excitement, 
intuition, inspiration, rather than the contemplative 
evolution of general principles, was the impression 
which Winckelmann's literary life gave to those 
about him. The quick, susceptible enthusiast, be- 
traying his temperament, even in appearance, by his 
olive complexion, his deep-seated, piercing eyes, 
his rapid movements, apprehended the subtlest 
principles of the Hellenic manner not through the 
understanding, but by instinct or touch. A German 
biographer of Winckelmann has compared him to 
Columbus. That is not the happiest of comparisons ; 
but it reminds one of a passage in which M. Edgar 
Quinet describes Columbus's famous voyage. His 
science was often at fault ; but he had a way of 
estimating at once the slightest indication of land 
in a floating weed or passing bird ; he seemed 
actually to come nearer to nature than other men. 
And that world in which others had moved with so 
much embarrassment, seems to call out in Winckel- 
mann new senses fitted to deal with it. He is en 
rapport with it ; it penetrates him, and becomes 
part of his temperament. He remodels his writings 
with constant renewal of insight ; he catches the 
thread of a whole sequence of laws in some hollow- 
ing of the hand, or dividing of the hair ; he seems 
to realise that fancy of the reminiscence of a forgotten 



viii. WINGKELMANN. 165 

knowledge hidden for a timie in the mind itself, as 

if the mind of one ^Aoo-o^ijflra? Trc^re /xeV epwTO^y 

fallen into a new cycle, were beginning its intel- 
lectual culture over again, yet with a certain power 
of anticipating its results. So comes the truth of 
Goethe^s judgment on his works ; they are ein 
Lebendiges fiir die Lehendigen geschrieben, ein 
Leben selbst. 

In 1758, Cardinal Albani, who possessed in his 
Roman villa a precious collection of antiques, became 
Winckelmann's patron. Pompeii had just opened its 
treasures ; Winckelmann gathered its firstfruits. But 
his plan of a visit to Greece remained unfulfilled. 
From his first arrival in Rome he had kept the 
* History of Ancient Art' ever in view. All his other 
writings were a preparation for it. It appeared, 
finally, in 1 764 ; but even after its publication 
Winckelmann was still employed in perfecting it. 
It is since his time that many of the most sig- 
nificant examples of Greek art have been submitted 
to criticism. He had seen little or nothing of what 
we ascribe to the age of Phidias ; and his concep- 
tion of Greek art tends, therefore, to put the mere 
elegance of Imperial society in place of the severe 
and chastened grace of the palaestra. For the most 
part he had to penetrate to Greek art through 
copies, imitations, and later Roman art itself; and 



166 THE RENAISSANCE. vm. 

it is not finrprifiing that this turbid medium has 
left in Winckehnann's actual results much that a 
more privileged criticism can correct. 

He had been twelve years in Rome. Admiring 
Germany had made many calls to him; at last, 
in 1768, he set out on a visit with the sculptor 
Cavaceppl As he left Rome a strange inverted 
home-sickness came upon him. He reached Vienna ; 
there he was loaded with honours and presents; 
other cities were awaiting him. Goethe, then 
nineteen years old, studjdng art at Leipsic, was 
expecting his coming with that wistful eager- 
ness which marked his youth, when the news of 
Winckelmann's murder arrived. All that fatigue 
du Nord had revived with double force. He left 
Vienna, intending to hasten back to Rome. At 
Trieste a delay of a few days occurred. With 
characteristic openness Winckelmann had confided 
his plans to a fellow-traveller, a man named 
Arcangeli, and had shown him the gold medals 
which he had received at Vienna. Arcangeli' s 
avarice was roused. One morning he entered 
Winckelmann^s room imder pretence of taking 
leave ; Winckelmann was then writing * memoranda 
for the future editor of the " History of Art,^^ ' stiQ 
seeking the perfection of his great work ; Arcangeli 
begged to see the medals once more. As Winckel- 



vin. WINOKELMANN. 167 

mann stooped down to take them from the chest, 
a cord was thrown round his neck. Some time 
after, a child whose friendship Winckelmann had 
made to beguile the delay, knocked at the door, 
and receiving no answer, gave an alarm. Winckel- 
mann was found dangerously wounded, and died 
a few hours later, after receiving the sacraments of 
the Romish church. It seemed as if the gods, in 
reward for his devotion to them, had given him 
a death which, for its swiftness and its opportunity, 
he might well have desired. *He has,^ says 
Goethe, ' the advantage of figuring in the memory 
of posterity as one eternally able and strong, for 
the image in which one leaves the world is that 
in which one moves among the shadows.' Yet, 
perhaps, it is not fanciful to regret that that meeting 
with Goethe did not take place. Goethe, then in 
all the pregnancy of his wonderful youth, still un- 
ruffled by the press and storm of his earlier man- 
hood, was awaiting Winckelmann with a curiosity 
of the noblest kind. As it was, Winckelmann be- 
came to him something like what Virgil was to 
Dante. And Winckelmann, with his fiery friend- 
ships, had reached that age and that period of 
culture at which emotions, hitherto fitftd, sometimes 
concentrate themselves in a vital unchangeable re- 
lationship. German literary history seems to have 



168 THE RENAISSANCE. vra. 

lost the chance of one of those famous friendships 
the very tradition of which becomes a stimulus to 
culture, and exercises an imperishable influence. 

In one of the frescoes of the Vatican, Eafiaelle 
has commemorated the tradition of the Catholic 
religion. Against a strip of peaceful sky, broken 
in upon by the beatific vision, are ranged the great 
personages of Christian history, with the Sacrament 
in the midst. The companion fresco presents a 
very different company, Dante alone appearing in 
both. Surrounded by the muses of Greek mytho- 
logy, under a thicket of myrtles, sits ApoUo, with 
the sources of Castalia at his feet. On either side 
are grouped those on whom the spirit of Apollo 
descended, the classical and Renaissance poets, to 
whom the waters of Castalia come down, a river 
making glad this other city of God. In this fresco 
it is the classical tradition, the orthodoxy of taste, 
that Raffaelje commemorates. Winckelmann^s in- 
tellectual history authenticates the claims of this 
tradition in human culture. In the countries where 
that tradition arose, where it still lurked about its 
own artistic relics, and changes of language had 
not broken its continuity, national pride might 
often light up anew an enthusiasm for it. Aliens 
might imitate that enthusiasm, and classicism be- 



VIII. WINGKELMANN, 169 

come from time to time an intellectual fashion ; 
but Winckelmann was not farther removed by lan- 
guage than by local aspects and associations from 
the vestiges of the classical spirit, and he lived 
at a time when, in Germany, classical studies were 
out of fashion. Yet, remote in time and place, he 
feels after the Hellenic world, divines the veins of 
ancient art, in which its life still circulates, and, 
like Scyles in the beautiful story of Herodotus, 
is irresistibly attracted by it. This testimony to 
the authority of the Hellenic tradition, its fitness 
to satisfy some vital requirement of the intellect, 
which Winckelmann contributes as a solitary man 
of genius, is offered also by the general history of 
culture. The spiritual forces of the past, which 
have prompted and informed the culture of a suc- 
ceeding age, live, indeed, within that culture, but 
with an absorbed, underground life. The Hellenic 
element alone has not been so absorbed or content 
with thk underground life ; from time to time it 
has started to the surface ; culture has been drawn 
back to its sources to be clarified and corrected. 
Hellenism is not merely an element in our intel- 
lectual life ; it is a conscious tradition in it. 

Again, individual genius works ever under con- 
ditions of time and place : its products are coloured 
by the varying aspects of nature and type of human 



170 THE RENAISSANCE, Yin. 

form and outward manners of life. There is thus 
an element of change in art ; criticism must never 
for a moment forget that 'the artist is the child 
of his time/ But besides these conditions of time 
and place, and independent of them, there is also 
an element of permanence, a standard of taste which 
genius confesses. This standard is maintained in 
a purely intellectual tradition; it acts upon the 
artist, not as one of the influences of his own age, 
but by means of the artistic products of the 
previous generation, which in youth have excited, 
and at the same time directed into a particular 
channel, his sense of beauty. The supreme artistic 
1 products of each generation thus form a series of 
] elevated points, taking each from each the reflec- 
tion of a strange light, the source of which is not 
in the atmosphere around and above them, but in 
a stage of society remote from ours. This standard 
takes its rise in Greece at a definite historical 
period. A tradition for all succeeding generations, 
it originates in a spontaneous growth out of the 
influences of Greek society. What were the con- 
ditions under which this ideal, this standard of 
artistic orthodoxy, was generated ? How was Greece 
enabled to force its thought upon Europe ? 

Greek art, when we first catch sight of it, is en- 
tangled with Greek religion. We. are accustomed to 



vm. WINCKELMANN. 171 

think of Greek religion as the religion of art and 
beauty, the religion of which the Olympian Zeus 
and the Athena Polias are the idols, the poems 
of Homer the sacred books. Thus Dr. Newman 
speaks of 'the classical polytheism which was gay 
and graceful, as was natural in a civilised age.' 
Yet such a view is only a partial one ; in it the 
eye is fixed on the sharp bright edge of high Hel- 
lenic culture, but loses sight of the sombre world 
across which it strikes. Greek religion, where we 
can observe it most distinctly, is at once a magni- 
ficent ritualistic system, and a cycle of poetical 
conceptions. Religions, as they grow by natural 
laws out of man's life, are modified by whatever 
modifies his life. They brighten imder a bright 
sky, they become liberal as the social range widens, 
they grow intense and shrill in .the clefts of hu- 
man life, where the spirit is narrow and confined, 
and the stars are visible at noonday ; and a fine 
analysis of these differences is one of the gravest 
functions of religious criticism. Still, the broad 
characteristic of all religions, as they exist for the 
greatest number, is a universal pagan sentiment, 
a paganism which existed before the Greek reli- 
gion, and has lingered far onward into the Christian 
world, ineradicable, like some persistent vegetable 
growth, because its seed is an element of the very 



172 THE RENAISSANCE. vm. 

soil out of which it springs. This pagan sentiment 
measures the sadness with which the human mind 
is filled whenever its thoughts wander far from what 
is here, and now. It is beset by notions of irre- 
sistible natural powers, for the most part ranged 
against man, but the secret also of his luck, making 
the earth golden and the grape fiery for him. He 
makes wilful Gods in his own image, gods smiling 
and drunken, or bleeding by a sad fataUty, to console 
him by their wounds, never closed from generation 
to generation. It is with a rush of home-sickness 
that the thought of death presents itself. He would 
remain at home for ever on the earth if he could : 
as it loses its colour, and the senses fail, he clings 
ever closer to it ; but since the mouldering of bones 
iand flesh must go on to the end, he is careful for 
: charms and talismans that may chance to have 
'^' ; some friendly power in them when the inevitable 
shipwreck comes. Such sentiment is the eternal 
stock of all religions, modified indeed by changes 
of time and place, but indestructible, because its 
root is so deep in the earth of man's nature. The 
breath of religious initiators passes over them ; a 
few 'rise up with wings as eagles,* but the broad 
level of religious life is not permanently changed. 
Religious progress, like all purely spiritual progress, 
is confined to a few. This sentiment fixes itself in 



tot; WINCKELMANN. 173 

the earliest times to certain usages of patriarchal 
life, the kindling of fire, the washing of the body, 
the breaking of bread, the slaughter of the flock, 
the gathering of harvest, holidays and dances. Here 
are the beginnings of a ritual, at first as occasional 
and unfixed as the sentiment which it expresses, 
but destined to become the permanent element of 
religious life. The usages of patriarchal life change ; 
but this germ of ritual remains, developing, but 
always in a religious interest, losing its domestic 
character, and therefore becoming more and more 
inexplicable with each generation. This pagan cult, 
in spite of local colouring, essentially one, is the 
base of aU religions. It is the anodyne which the 
religious principle, like one administering opiates 
to the incurable, has added to the law which makes 
life sombre for the vast majority of mankind. 

More definite religious conceptions come from other 
sources, and fix themselves upon this cult in various 
ways, changing it and giving it new meanings. 
With the Hebrew people they came from individuals 
of genius, the authors of the prophetic literature. In 
Greece they were derived from mythology, itself not 
due to a religious source at all, but developing in 
the course of time into a body of anthropomorphic 
religious conceptions. To the unprogressive ritual 
element it brought these conceptions, itself the wr^pov 



174 THE RENAISSANCE. vm. 

Sava/iify an element of refinement, of ascension, with 
the promise of an endless destiny. While the 
cult remains fixed, the aesthetic element, only acci- 
dentally connected with it, expands with the fireedom 
and mobility of the things of the intellect. Always 
the fixed element is the religious observance; the 
fluid unfixed element is the myth, the religious con- 
ception. This religion is itself pagan, and has on a 
broad view of it the pagan sadness. It does not at 
once and for the majority become the higher Hellenic 
religion. That primeval pagan sentiment, as it is 
found in its most pronounced form in Christian 
coimtries where Christianity has been least adul- 
terated by modern ideas, as in Catholic Bavaria, 
is discernible also in the common world of Greek 
religion, against which the higher Hellenic culture 
is in relief. In Greece, as in CathoKc Bavaria, the 
beautiful artistic shrines, with their chastened taste, 
are far between. The wilder people have wilder 
gods; which, however, in Athens or Corinth, or 
Lacedaemon, changing ever with the worshippers in 
whom they live and move and have their being, 
borrow something of the lordliness and distinction of 
human nature there. The fiery, stupefying wine 
becomes in a happier region clear and exhilarating. 
In both, the coimtry people cherish the unlovely idols 
of an earlier time, such as those which Pausanias 



VIII. WINCKELMANN. 175 

found still devoutly preserved in Arcadia. Athenaeus 
tells the story of one who, coming to a temple of 
Latona, had expected to see a worthy image of the 
mother of Apollo, and who laughed on finding only a 
shapeless wooden figure. In both, the fixed element 
is not the myth or religious conception, but the cult 
with its unknown origin and meaning only half 
understood. Even the mysteries, the centres of 
Greek religious life at a later period, were not a 
doctrine but a ritual ; and one can imagine the 
Catholic chiu'ch retaining its hold through the ' sad 
mechanic exercise' of its ritual, in spite of a diffused 
criticism or scepticism. Again, each adjusts but 
imperfectly its moral and theological conceptions ; 
each has its mendicants, its purifications, its Antino- 
mian mysticism, its garments offered to the gods, its 
statues worn with kissing,^ its exaggerated super- 
stitions for the vulgar only, its worship of sorrow, its 
addolorata, its mournful mysteries. There is scarcely 
one wildness of the Catholic church that has not been 
anticipated by Greek polytheism. What should we 
have thought of the vertiginous prophetess at the 
very centre of Greek religion? The supreme Hellenic 
culture is a sharp edge of light across this gloom. 
The Dorian cult of Apollo, rational, chastened. 



^ Hermann's Gbttesdienstliche Alterthtimer der Qriechen. Th. ii. 
c. ii. § 21, i6. 



176 THE RENAISSANCE, viii. 

debonair, with his unbroken daylight, always opposed 
to the sad Chthonian divinities, is the aspiring 
element, by force and spring of which Greek religion 
sublimes itself.' Beligions have sometimes, like 
mighty streams, been diverted to a higher service of 
humanity as political institutions. Out of Greek re- 
ligion under happy conditions arises Greek art, das 
Einzige^ das Unerwartete, to minister to human 
culture. The claim of Greek religion is that it was 
able to transform itself into an artistic ideal. Unlike 
that Delphic Pythia, old but clothed as a maiden, 
this new Pythia is a maiden, though in the old 
religious vesture. 

For the thoughts of the Greeks about themselves 
and their relation to the world were ever in the 
happiest readiness to be turned into an object for 
the sensea In this is the main distinction between 
Greek art and the mystical art of the Christian 
middle age, which is always struggling to express 
thoughts beyond itself. Take, for instance, a cha- 
racteristic work of the middle age, Angelico's ' Coro- 
nation of the Virgin,' at San Marco, in Florence. 
In some strange halo of a moon sit the Virgin and 
our Lord, clad in mystical white raiment, half 
shroud, half priestly linen. Our Lord, with rosy 



2 



Hermann, Th. i. § 5. 



VIII. WINCKELMANN. 177 

nimbus and the long pale hair, tanquam lana alba et 
tanquam nix, of the figure in the Apocalypse, sets, 
with slender finger tips, a crown of pearl on the head 
of his mother, who, corpse-like in her refinement, 
bends to receive it, the light lying like snow upon 
her forehead. Certainly it cannot be said of 
Angelico's fresco that it throws into a sensible form 
our highest thoughts about man and his relation to 
the world ; but it did not do this adequately even for 
Angelico. For him all that is outward or sensible in 
hts work — the hair like wool, the rosy nimbus, the 
crown of pearl— is only the symbol or type of an in- 
expressible world to which he wishes to direct the 
thoughts ; he wojjld have shrunk from the notion that 
what the eye apprehended was all. Such forms of 
art, then, are inadequate to the matter they clothe ; 
they remain ever below its level. Something of this 
kind is true also of Oriental art. As in the middle 
age from an exaggerated inwardness, so in the East 
from a vagueness, a want of definition in thought, the 
matter presented to art is unmanageable : forms of 
sense struggle vainly with it. The many-headed 
gods of the East, the orientalised Ephesian Diana 
wnith its numerous breasts, like Angelico's fresco, are 
at best overcharged symbols, a means of hinting at an 
idea which art cannot adequately express, which still 
remains in the world of shadows. 



178 THE RENAISSANCE. vm. 

But take a work of Greek art, the Venus of Melos. 
That is in no sense a symbol, a suggestion of any- 
thing beyond its own victorious fairness. The mind 
begins and ends with the finite image, yet loses no 
part of the spiritual motive. That motive is not 
lightly and loosely attached to the sensuous form, as 
the meaning to the allegory, but saturates and is 
identical with it. The Greek mind had advanced to 
a particular stage of self-reflection, but was care- 
fiil not to pass beyond it. In Oriental thought 
there is a vague conception of life everywhere, 
but no true appreciation of itself by the mind, no 
knowledge of the distinction of man's nature ; in 
thought he still mingles himself with the fantastic 
indeterminate life of the animal and vegetable world. 
In Greek thought the ' lordship of the soul ' is recog- 
nised ; that lordship gives authority and divinity to 
human eyes and hands and feet; nature is thrown 
into the background. But there Greek thought 
finds its happy limit ; it has not yet become too 
inward ; the mind has not begun to boast of its 
independence of the flesh ; the spirit has not yet 
absorbed everything with its emotions, nor reflected 
its own coloiu* everywhere. It has indeed committed 
itself to a train of reflection which must end in a 
defiance of form, of all that is outward, in an ex- 
aggerated idealism. Buti^that end is still distant; 



VIII. WINCKELMANN. 179 

it has not yet plunged into the depths of Christian 
mysticisnL 

This ideal art, in which the thought does not out- 
strip or lie beyond its sensible embodiment, could not 
have arisen out of a phase of life that was uncomely 
or poor. That delicate pause in Greek reflection was 
joined by some supreme good luck to the perfect 
animal nature of the Greeks. Here are the two con- 
ditions of an artistic ideal. The influences which 
perfected the animal nature of the Greeks are part 
of the process by which the ideal was evolved. Those 
'Mothers' who in the second part of 'Faust' mould 
and remould the typical forms which appear in human 
history, preside at the beginning of Greek culture 
over such a concourse of happy physical conditions 
as ever generates by natural laws some rare type of 
intellectual or spiritual life. That delicate air, 'nimbly 
and sweetly recommending itself ' to the senses, the 
finer aspects of nature, the finer lime and clay of the 
human form, and modelling of the bones of the 
human countenance, — ^these are the good luck of the 
Greek when he enters into life. Beauty becomes a 
distinction like genius or noble place. 

' By no people,' says Winckelmann, ' has beauty 
been so highly esteemed as by the Greeks. The 
priests of a youthful Jupiter at Mgdd, of the Ismenian 
Apollo, and the priest who at Tanagra led the pro- 

N 2 



180 THE RENAISSANCE, vm. 

cession of Mercury, bearing a lamb upon his shoulders, 
were always youths to whom the prize of beauty had 
been awarded. The citizens of Egesta, in Sicily, 
erected a monument to a certain Philip, who was 
not their fellow-citizen, but of Croton, for his dis- 
tinguished beauty ; and the people made offerings 
at it. In an ancient song, ascribed to Simonides, or 
Epicharmus, of four wishes, the first was health, the 
second beauty. And as beauty was so longed for and 
prized by the Greeks, every beautifid person sought 
to become known to the whole people by this dis- 
tinction, and above all to approve himself to the 
artists, because they awarded the prize ; and this was 
for the artists an opportunity of having supreme 
beauty ever before their eyes. Beauty even gave a 
right to fame ; and we find in Greek histories the 
most beautiful people distiaguished Some were 
famous for the beauty of one single part of their 
form ; as Demetrius Phalereus, for his beautiful 
eyebrows, was called x^p^TOjSXe^ajooy. It seems even 
to have been thought that the procreation of 
beautiful children might be promoted by prizes ; 
this is shown by the existence of contests for beauty, 
which in ancient times were established by Cypselus, 
King of Arcadia, by the river Alpheus ; and at the 
feast of Apollo of PhilsB a prize was offered to the 
youths for the deftest kiss. This was decided by 



VIII. WINGKELMANN. 181 

an umpire ; as also at Megara by the grave of Diodes. 
At Sparta, and at Lesbos in tbe temple of Juno, and 
among the Parrhasii, there were contests for beauty 
among women. The general esteem for beauty went 
so far, that the Spartan women set up in their bed- 
chambers a Nireus, a Narcissus, or a Hyacinth, that 
they might bear beautiful children^' 

So from a few stray antiquarianisms, from a few 
faces cast up sharply from the waves, Winckelmann, 
as his manner is, divines the temperament of the 
antique world, and that in which it had delight. It 
has passed away with that distant age, and we may 
venture to dwell upon it. What sharpness and 
reality it has, is the ^sharpness and reality of sud- 
denly arrested life. Gymnastic originated as part 
of a rehgious ritual. The worshipper was to recom- 
mend himself to the gods by becoming fleet and 
serpentining, and white arid red, like them. The 
beauty of the palaestra and the beauty of the artistes 
studio reacted on each other. The youth tried to 
rival his gods, and his increased beauty passed back 

into them. "O^n/yjUi iravra^ deovg fxtj eXea-Qai av rhv /3a- 
(TiXeft)? apyjiv avrl roS koXo^ etvai. That is the form in 

which one age of the world chose ' the better part' 
—a perfect world, if our gods could have seemed 



I ( 



Qeschichte der Kunst des Alterthums,' Th. i. Kap. iv. 



182 THE RENAISSANCE. vra. 

for ever only fleet and serpentining, and white and 
red — ^not white and red as in Francia's * Golgotha/ 
Let us not say, would that that unperplexed youth 
of humanity, seeing itself and satisfied, had never 
passed into a moumfiil maturity ; for already the 
deep joy was in store for the spirit of finding the 
ideal of that youth still red with life in its grave. 

It followed that the Greek ideal expressed itself 
pre-eminently in sculpture. All art has a sensuous 
element, colour, form, soimd — in poetry a dexterous 
recalling of these together with the profound joyful 
sensuousness of motion ; each of these may be a 
medium for the ideal ; it is partly accident which in 
any individual case makes the bom artist, poet or 
painter rather than sculptor. But as the mind itself 
has had an historical development, one form of art, 
by the very limitations of its material, ntiay be more 
adequate than another for the expression of any one 
phaae of its experience. Different attitudes of the 
imagination have a native aflSnity with different 
types of sensuous form, so that they combiae easily 
and entirely. The arts may thus be ranged in a 
series which corresponds to a series of developments 
in the hiunan mind itself ^ Architecture, which 
begins in a practical need, can only express by vague 



? Hegel, Aesthetik, Theil. ii. Einleitung. 



VIII. WINOKELMANN. 183 

hint or symbol the spirit or mind of the artist. He 
closes his sadness over him, or wanders in the per- 
plexed intricacies of things, or projects his purpose 
from him clean-cut and sincere, or bares himself to 
the sunlight. But these spiritualities, felt rather 
than seen, can but lurk about architectural form as 
volatile effects, to fee gathered from it by reflection ; 
their expression is not really sensuous at all. As 
human form is not the subject with which it deals, 
architecture is the mode in which the artistic effort 
centres when the thoughts of man concerning himself 
are stiU indistinct, when he is still little preoccupied 
with those harmonies, storms, victories of the unseen 
intellectual world, which wrought out into the bodily 
form, give it an interest and significance commu- 
nicable to it alone. The art of Egypt, with its 
supreme architectural effects, is, according to Hegel's 
beautiful comparison, a Memnon waiting for the day, 
the day of the Greek spirit, the hiunanistic spirit, 
with its power of speech. Again, painting, music, 
poetry, with their endless power of complexity, are 
the special arts of the romantic and modem ages. 
Into thege, with the utmost attenuation of detail, 
may be translated every delicacy of thought and 
feeling incidental to a consciousness brooding with 
delight over itself. Through their gradationfi of 
shade, their exquisite intervals, they project in an 



184 THE RENAISSANCE. vni. 

external form that which is most inward in humour, 
passion, sentiment. Between architecture and the 
romantic arts of painting, music, and poetry, is sculp- 
ture, which, unlike architecture, deals immediately 
with man, while it contrasts with the romantic arts, 
because it is not self-analytical. It deals more ex- 
clusively than any other art with the human form, 
itself one entire medium of spiritual expression, 
trembling, blushing, melting into dew with inward 
excitement. That spirituality which only lurks 
about architecture as a volatile effect, in sculpture 
takes up the whole given material and penetrates it 
with an imaginative motive ; and at first sight 
sculpture, with its solidity of form, seems more real 
and full than the faint abstract manner of poetry or 
painting. Still the fact is the reverse. Discourse 
and action show man as he is more directly than 
the springing of the muscles and the moulding of 
the flesh; and these poetry commands. Painting, by 
the flushing of colour in the face and dilatation of 
light in the eye, and music by its subtle range of 
tones, can refine most delicately upon a single mo- 
ment of passion, unravelUng its finest threads. 

But why should sculpture thus Umit itself to pure 
form? Because by this limitation it becomes a 
perfect medium of expression for one peculiar motive 
of the imaginative intellect. It therefore renounces 



n 



VIII. WINCKELMANN, 185 

all those attributes of its material which do not help 
that motive. It has had, indeed, from the beginning 
an unfixed claim to colour ; but this colour has 
always been more or less conventional, with no 
melting or modulation of tones, never admitting 
more than a very limited realism. It was maintained 
chiefly as a religious tradition. In proportion as 
sculpture ceased to be merely decorative and sub- 
ordinate to architectiu'e it threw itself upon pm:e 
form. It renounces the power of expression by sink- 
ing or heightening tones. In it no member of the 
human form is more significant than the rest; the 
eye is wide, and without pupil ; the lips and brow 
are not more precious than hands, and breasts, and 
feet. The very slightness of its material is part of 
its pride ; it has no backgrounds, no sky or atmo- 
sphere, to suggest and interpret a train of feeling ; a 
little of suggested motion, and much of pure light on 
its gleaming surfaces, with pure form — only these. 
And it gains more than it loses by this limitation to 
its own distinguishing motives ; it unveils man in 
the repose of his unchanging characteristics. Its 
white light purged from the angry blood-like stains 
of action and passion, reveals not what is accidental 
in man, but the god, as opposed to man's restless 
movement. It records the first naive unperplexed 
recognition of man by himself ; and it is a proof of 



186 THE RENAISSANCE. vin. 

the high artistic capacity of the Greeks that they 
apprehended and remained true to these exquisite 
limitations, yet in spite of them gave to their 
creations a vital, mobile individuality. 

Ileiterkeity blitheness or repose, and Allgemeinheit, 
generality or breadth, are, then, the supreme cha- 
racteristics of the Hellenic ideal But that generality 
or breadth has nothing in common with the lax 
observation, the unlearned thought, the flaccid ex- 
ecution which have sometimes claimed superiority 
in art on the plea of being * broad' or * general/ 
Hellenic breadth and generality come of a culture 
minute, severe, constantly renewed, rectifying and 
concentrating its impressions into certain pregnant 
types. The base of all artistic genius is the power 
of conceiving humanity in a new, striking, rejoicing 
way, of putting a happy world of its own creation 
in place of the meaner world of common days, of 
generating around itself an atmosphere with a novel 
power of refraction, selecting, transforming, recom- 
bining the images it transmits, according to the choice 
of the imaginative intellect. In exercising this power, 
painting and poetry have a choice of subject 
almost unlimited. The range of characters or persons 
open to them is as various as life itself ; no character, 
however trivial, misshapen, or unlovely, can resist 
their magic. This is because those arts can accom- 



vin. WINOKELMANN, 187 

plish their ftinction in the choice and development of 
some special situation, which lifts or glorifies a 
character in itself not poetical. To realise this 
situation, to define in a chiU and empty atmosphere 
the focus where rays, in themselves pale and impotent, 
imite and begin to bum, the artist has to employ the 
most cunning detail, to complicate and refibae upon 
thought and passion a thousand-fold. The poems of 
Robert Browning supply brilliant examples of this. 
His poetry is pre-eminently the poetry of situations. 
The characters themselves are always of secondary j^j 
importance ; often they are characters in themselves / 
of little interest ; they seem to come to him by \ 
strange accidents from the ends of the world. His 
gift is shown by the way in which he accepts such a 
character and throws it into some situation, appre- 
hends it in some delicate pause of life, in which for a 
moment it becomes ideal. Take an instance from 
^Dramatis PersonsB.^ In the poem entitled *Le Byron 
de nos Jours ' we have a single moment of passion 
thrown into relief in this exquisite way. Those two 
jaded Parisians are not intrinsically interesting ; they, 
only begin to interest us when thrown into a choice 
situation. But to discriminate that moment, to make 
it appreciable by us, that we may ' find it,' what a 
cobweb of allusions, what double and treble reflections 
of the mind upon itaelf, what an artificial light is 



188 THE RENAISSANCE. vm. 

constructed and broken over the chosen situation — 
on how fine a needle's point that little world of 
passion is balanced ! Yet, in spite of this intricacy, 
the poem has the clear ring of a central motive ; we 
receive from it the impression of one imaginative 
tone, of a single creative act. 

To produce such effects at all requires the resources 
of painting, with its power of indirect expression, of 
subordinate but significant detail, its atmosphere, its 
foregrounds and backgrounds. To produce them in 
a pre-eminent degree requires all the resources of 
poetry, language in its most purged form, its remote 
associations and suggestions, its double and treble 
lights. These appliances sculpture cannot command. 
In it, therefore, not the special situation, but the 
type, the general character of the subject to be de- 
lineated, is all-important. In poetry and painting, 
the situation predominates over the character ; in 
sculpture, the character over the situation. E:?- 
cluded by the limitations of its material firom the 
development of exquisite situations, it has to choose 
fi:*om a select number of types intrinsically interest- 
ing, interesting that is, independently of any special 
situation into which they may be thrown. Sculp- 
ture finds the secret of its power in presenting these 
types in their broad, central, incisive lines. This it 
effects not by accumulation of detail, but by ab- 



vin. WINCKELMANN. 189 

stracting from it. All that is accidental, that dis- 
tracts the simple effect of the supreme types of 
humanity, all traces in them of the commonness of 
the world, it gradually purges away. 

Works of art produced under this law, and only 
these, are really characterised by Hellenic generality 
or breadth. In every direction it is a law of limita- 
tion ; it keeps passion always below that degree of 
intensity at which it is necessarily transitory, never 
winding up the features to one note of anger, or 
desire, or surprise. In the allegorical designs of the 
middle ages, we find isolated qualities portrayed as 
by so many masks ; its religioTis art has familiarised 
us with faces fixed obdurately into blank types of 
religious sentiment ; and men and women, in the 
hurry of life, often wear the sharp impress of one 
absorbing motive, from which it is said death sets 
their features free. All such instances may be ranged 
imder the * grotesque ' ; and the HeUenic ideal has 
nothing in common with the * grotesque.' It lets 
passion play lightly over the surface of the individual 
form, which loses by it nothing of its central im- 
passivity, its depth and repose. To all but the 
highest culture, the reserved faces of the gods will 
ever have something of insipidity. Again, in the 
best Greek sculpture, the archaic immobility has been 
thawed, its forms are in motion ; but it is a motion 



f 



190 THE RENAISSANCE. vni. 

ever kept in reserve, which is very seldom committed 
to any definite action. Endless as are the attitudes 
of Greek sculpture, exquisite as is the invention of 
the Greeks in this direction, the actions or situations 
it permits are simple and few. There is no Greek 
Madonna ; the goddesses are always childless. The 
actions selected are those which would be without 
significance, except in a divine person, binding on a 
sandal or preparing for the bath. When a more 
complex and significant action is permitted, it is 
most often represented as just finished, so that eager 
expectancy is excluded, as Apollo just afker the 
slaughter of the Python, or Venus with the apple 
of Paris already in her hand. The Laocoon, with all 
/ that patient science through which it has triumphed 
over an almost unmanageable subject, marks a period 
in which sculpture has begun to aim at effects 
legitimate only in painting. The hair, so rich a 
source of expression in painting, and, as we have 
lately seen, in poetry, because relatively to the eye 
or to the lip it is mere drapery, is withdrawn from 
attention ; its texture, as well as its colour, is lost, 
its arrangement faintly and severely indicated, with 
no enmeshed or broken light. The eyes are wide 
and directionless, not fixing anything with their 
gaze, nor rivetting the brain to any special external 
object ; the brows without hair. It deals almost 



vm. WINGKELMANN. 191 

exclusively with youth, where the moulding of the 
bodily organs is still as if suspended between growth 
and completion, indicated but not emphasised ; where 
the transition from curve to curve is so delicate and 
elusive that Winckelmann compares it to a quiet sea, 
which, although we understand it to be in motion, 
we nevertheless regard as an image of repose ; where, 
therefore, the exact degree of development is so 
hard to apprehend. If one had to choose a single 
product of Hellenic art, to save in the wreck of all 
the rest, one would choose from the * beautiful mul- ^ / 
titude ' of the Panathenaic fiieze that line of youths / 
on horses, with their level glances, their proud patient/ . 
lips, their chastened reins, their whole bodies in 
exquisite service. This colourless unclaimed purity 
of life, with its blending and interpenetration of intel- 
kctual, spiritual, and physical elements, still folded 
together, pregnant with the possibilities of a whole 
world closed within it, is the highest expression of 
that indifference which is beyond all that is relative 
or partial. Everywhere there is the effect of an 
awaking, of a child's sleep just disturbed. All these 
effects are united in a single instance — the Adorante 
of the museum of Berlin, a youth who has gained 
the wrestler's prize, with hands lifted and open in 
praise for the victory. Naive, unperplexed, it is the 
image of man as he springs first from the sleep of 



192 THE RENAISSANCE. viii. 

nature ; his white light taking no colour from any 
one-sided experience, characterless so far as character 
involves subjection to the accidental influences of 
life. In dealing with youth, Greek art betrays a 
tendency even to merge distinctions of sex. The 
Hermaphrodite was a favourite subject from early 
times. It was wrought out over and over again, 
with passionate care, from the mystic terminal 
Hermaphrodite of the British Museum, to the per- 
fect blending of male and female beauty in the 
Hermaphrodite of the Louvre^. 

* This sense,' says Hegel, * for the consummate 
modelling of divine and human fonns was pre- 
eminently at home in Greece. In its poets and 
orators, its historians and philosophers, Greece cannot 
be conceived from a central point, unless one brings, 
as a key to the understanding of it, an insight into 
the ideal forms of sculpture, and regards the images 
of statesmen and philosophers as well as epic and 
dramatic heroes from the artistic point of view ; for 
those who act, as well as those who create and think, 
have in those beautiful days of Greece this plastic 
character. They are great and free, and have grown 
up on the soil of their own individuality, creating 
themselves out of themselves, and moulding them- 



^ Hegel, Aesthetik, Th. iii. Absch. 2, Kap. i. 



VIII. WINCKELMANN. f93 

selves to what they were and willed to be. The age 
of Pericles was rich in such characters : Pericles 
himself, Phidias, Plato, above all Sophocles, Thu- 
cydides also, Xenophon and Socrates, each in his own 
order, without the perfection of one being diminished 
by that of the others. They are ideal artists of 
themselves, cast each in one flawless mould — works 
of art which stand before us as an immortal pre- 
sentment of the gods. Of this modelling also, are 
those bodily works of art, the victors in the Olympic 
Games ; yes, and even Phryne, who, as the most 
beautiful of women, ascended naked out of the water 
in the presence of assembled Greece^' 

This key to the understanding of the Greek spirit, 
Winckelmann possessed in his own nature, itself 
Uke a relic of classical antiquity laid open by accident 
to our alien modem atmosphere. To the criticism 
of that consummate Greek modelling he brought not 
only his culture but his temperament. We have 
seen how definite was the leading motive of his 
culture ; how, like some central root -fibre, it main- 
tained the well-rounded unity of his life through a .^/ 
thousand distractions. Interests not his, nor meant / 
for him, political, moral, religious, never disturbed' 
him. In morals, as in criticism, he followed the clue 
of an unerring instinct. Penetrating into the antique 

world by his passion, his temperament, he enunciates 





'\ 



194 TEE RENAISSANCE. viii. 

no formal principles, always hard and one-sided ; it 
remained for Hegel to formulate what in Winckel- 
mann is everjrwhere individualised and concrete. 
Minute and anxious as his culture was, he never 
became one-sidedly self- analytical. Occupied ever 
with himself, perfecting himself and cultivating his 
genius, he was not content, as so often happens with 
such natiu'es, that the atmosphere between him and 
other minds should be thick and clouded ; he was 
ever jealously refining his meaning into a form, ex- 
press, clear, objective. This temperament he nur- 
tured and invigorated by friendships which kept hiTn 
ever in direct contact with the spirit of youth. The 
beauty of the Greek statues was a sexless beauty ; 
the statues of the gods had the least traces of sex. 
Here, there is a moral sexlessness, a kind of im- 
potence, an ineffectual wholeness of nature, yet with 
a divine beauty and significance of its own. 

One result of this temperament is a serenity, 
a Heiterkeit, which characterises Winckelmann^s 
handling of the sensuous side of Greek art. This 
serenity is, perhaps, in a great measure, a negative 
quality ; it is the absence of any sense of want, or 
corruption, or shame. With the sensuous element in 
Greek art he deals in the pagan manner ; and what 
is implied in that ? It has been sometimes said 
that art is a means of escape from * the tyranny of 



VIII. WINCKELMANN, 195 

the senses/ It may be so for the spectator ; he 
may find that the spectacle of supreme works of art 
takes from the life of the senses something of its 
turbid fever. But this is possible for the spectator 
only because the artist in producing those works 
has gradually sunk his intellectual and spiritual ideas 
in sensuous form. He may live, as Keats lived, a 
pure life ; but his soul, like that of Plato's false as- 
tronomer, becomes more and more immersed in sense, 
imtil nothing else has any interest for him. How 
could such an one ever again endure the greyness of the 
ideal or spiritual world 1 The spiritualist is satisfied 
in seeing the sensuous elements escape from his con- 
ceptions ; his interest grows, as the dyed garment 
bleaches in the keener air. But the artist steeps his 
thought again and again into the fire of colour. To 
the Greek this immersion in the sensuous was in- 
difierent. Greek sensuousness, therefore, does not 
fever the blood ; it is shameless and childlike. But 
Christianity, with its uncompromising idealism, 
discrediting the slightest touch of sense, has lighted 
up for the artistic life, with its inevitable sensuousness 
a background of flame. *I did but taste a little 
honey with the end of the rod that was in mine hand, 
and lo, I must die.' It is hard to pursue that life 
without something of conscious disavowal of a spiritual 

world ; and this imparts to genuine artistic interests 

o % 



196 THE RENAISSANCE, viii. 

a kind of intoxication. From this intoxication Winckel- 
mann is free ; he fingers those pagan marbles with un- 
singed hands, with no sense of shame or loss. That is to 
deal with the sensuous side of art in the pagan 
manner. 

The longer we contemplate that Hellenic ideal in 
which man is at unity with himself, with his physical 
nature, with the outward world, the more we may be 
inclined to regret that he should ever have passed 
beyond it, to contend for a perfection that makes the 
blood turbid, and frets the flesh, and discredits the 
/ actual world about us. But if he was to be saved 

r 
p 

from the ennui which ever attaches itself to 
realisation, even the realisation of perfection, it was 
necessary that a conflict should come, that some 
sharper note should grieve the perfect harmony, in 
order that the spirit, chafed by it, might beat out 
at last a broader and profounder music. In Greek 
tragedy this conflict has begun ; man finds himself 
face to face with rival claims. Greek tragedy shows 
^ how such a conflict may be treated with serenity, how 
the evolution of it may be a spectacle of the dignity, 
not of the impotence, of the human spirit. But it 
is not only in tragedy that the Greek spirit showed 
itself capable of thus winning joy out of matter in 
itself full of discouragements. Theocritus too, often 
strikes a note of romantic sadness. But what a 



VIII. WINCKELMANN, 197 

blithe and steady poise above these discouragements 
in a clear and sunny stratum of the air ! 

Into this stage of Greek achievement Winckelmann 
did not enter. Supreme as he is where his true 
interest lay, his insight into the typical unity and 
repose of the sculpturesque seems to liave involved 
limitation in another direction. His conception of 
art excludes that bolder type of it which deals con- 
fidently and serenely with life, conflict, evil. Living 
in a world of exquisite but abstract and colourless 
form, he could hardly have conceived of the subtle 
and penetrative, but somewhat grotesque art of the 
modem world. What would he have thought of 
Gilliatt, or of the bleeding mouth of Fantine in that 
first part of * Les Miserables,' penetrated as it is with 
a sense of beauty as lively and transparent as that of 
a Greek ? There is even a sort of preparation for 
the romantic temper within the limits of the Greek 
ideal itself, which Winckelmann failed to see. For 
Greek religion has not merely its mournful mysteries 
of Adonis, of Hyacinthus, of Ceres, but it is conscious 
also of the fall of earlier divine dynasties. Hyperion 
gives way to Apollo, Oceanus to Poseidon. Around 
the feet of that tranquil Olympian family still crowd 
the weary shadows of an earlier, more formless, 
divine world. Even their still minds are troubled 
with thoughts of a limit to duration, of inevitable 



198 THE RENAISSANCE. vm. 

decay, of dispossession. Again, the supreme and 
colourless abstraction of those divine forms, which is 
the secret of their repose, is also a premonition of the 
fleshless consumptive refinements of the pale medi- 
aeval artists. That high indifference to the outward, 
that impassivity, has already a touch of the corpse in 
it ; we see already Angelico and the * Master of the 
Passion ' in the artistic future. The crushing of the 
sensuous, the shutting of the door upon it, the flesh- 
outstripping interest, is already traceable. Those 
abstracted gods, ' ready to melt out their essence fine 
into the Winds,' who can fold up their flesh as a 
garment, and remain themselves, seem already to feel 
that bleak air in which, like Helen of Troy herself, 
they wander as the spectres of the middle age. 

Gradually as the world came into the church, 
aa Christiaoiity compromised ite earUer severities, the 
native artistic interest reasserted its claims. But 
Ckristian art was stUl dependent on pagan examples, 
building the shafts of pagan temples into its churches, 
perpetuating the form of the basilica, in later times 
working the disused amphitheatres as quarries. The 
sensuous expression of conceptions which unreservedly 
discredit the world of sense, was the delicate problem 
which Christian art had before it. If we think of 
mediaeval painting as it ranges from the early German 



VIII. WINCKELMANN, 199 

schools, still with the air of a charnel-house about 
them, to the clear loveliness of Perugino, we shall 
see that the problem was met. Even in the worship 
of sorrow the native blitheness of art asserted itself ; 
the religious spirit, as Hegel says, * smiled through 
its tears/ So perfectly did the young Kaffaelle infuse 
that Heiterkeity that pagan blitheness, into religious 
works, that his picture of Saint Agatha at Bologna 
became to Goethe a step in the evolution of 
*Iphigenie\^ But in proportion as this power of 
smUing was refoimd, there came also an aspiration 
towards that lost antique art, some relics of which 
Christian art had buried in itself, ready to work 
wonders when their day came. 

The history of art has suffered as much as any 
history by trenchant and absolute divisions. Pagan 
and Christian art are sometimes harshly opposed, and 
the Renaissance is represented as a fashion which set 
in at a definite period. That is the superficial view ; 
the deeper view is that which preserves the identity 
of European culture. The two are really continuous : 
and there is a sense in which it may be said that the 
Renaissance was an uninterrupted efiort of the mid- 
dle age, that it was ever taking place. When the 
actual rehcs of the antique were restored to the 



Italianische Eeise. Bologna, 19 Oct. 1786. 



200 THE RENAISSANCE. vm. 

world, it was to Christian eyes as if an ancient 
plague-pit had been opened : all the world took the 
contagion of the life of nature and the senses. 
Christian art allying itself with that restored anti- 
quity which it had ever emulated, soon ceased to 
exist. For a time art dealt with Christian subjects 
as its patrons required ; but its true freedom was in 
the life of the senses and the blood — ^blood no longer 
dropping from the hands in sacrifice, as with Angehco, 
but, as with Titian, burning in the face for desire and 
love. And now it was seen that the mediaeval spirit 
too had done something for the destiny of the antique. 
By hastening the decline of art, by withdrawing 
interest from it, and yet keeping the thread of its 
traditions, it had suffered the human mind to repose, 
that it might awake when day came, with eyes 
refreshed, to those antique forms. 

The aim of a right criticism is to place Winckel- 
mann in an intellectual perspective, of which Goethe 
:. * is the foreground. For, after all, he is infinitely less 
than Goethe ; it is chiefly because at certain points 
he comes in contact with Goethe that criticism enter- 
tains consideration of him. His relation to modern 
culture is a peculiar one. He is not of the modem 
world ; nor is he of the eighteenth century, although 
so much of his outer life is characteristic of it. But 
that note of revolt against the eighteenth century. 



vin. WINCKELMANN, 201 

which we detect in Goethe, was struck by Winckel- 
mann. Goethe fllustrates that union of the Koman- 
tic spirit, its adventure, its variety, its deep sub- 
jectivity, with Hellenism, its transparency, its ration- 
ality, its desire of beauty — ^that marriage of Faust 
and Helena, of which the art of the nineteenth cen- 
tury is the child, the beautiful lad Euphorion, as 
Goethe conceives him, on the crags in the * splendour 
of battle,' ^ in harness as. for victory/ his brows 
bound with light\ Goethe illustrates, too, the pre- 
ponderance in this marriage of the Hellenic ele- 
ment ; and that element, in its true essence, was 
made known to him by Winckelmann. 

Breadth, centrahty, with blitheness and repose, 
are the marks of Hellenic culture. Is that culture 
a lost art? The local, accidental colouring of its 
own age has passed from it ; the greatness that is 
dead looks greater when every link with what is 
slight and vulgar has been severed; we can only 
see it at all in the reflected, refined light which a 
high education creates for us. Can we bring down 
that ideal into the gaudy, perplexed light of modem 
life? 

Certainly for us of the modem world, with its 
conflicting claims, its entangled interests, distracted 



' Faust, Th. ii. Act 3. 



202 THE RENAISSANCE. vm. 

by 80 many sorrows, so many preoccupations, so 
bewildering an experience, the problem of unity 
with ourselves in blitheness and repose, is far 
harder than it was for the Greek within the simple 
terms of antique life. Yet, not less than ever, the 
intellect demands completeness, centrality. It is 
this which Winckelmann prints on the imagina- 
tion of Goethe, at the beginning of his culture, in 
its original and simplest form, as in a fragment 
of Greek art itself, stranded on that littered, inde- 
terminate shore of Germany in the eighteenth cen- 
tury. In Winckelmann this type comes to him, not 
as in a book or a theory, but importunately, in a 
passionate life and personality. For Goethe, pos- 
sessing all modem interests, ready to be lost in the 
perplexed currents of modem thought, he defines in 
clearest outline the problem of culture-balance, unity 
with oneself, consummate Greek modelling. 

It could no longer be solved, as in Phryne ascend- 
ing naked out of the water, by perfection of todily 
form, or any joyful imion with the world without ; 
the shadows had grown too long, the light too 
solemn for that. It could hardly be solved as in 
Pericles or Phidias, by the direct exercise of any 
single talent ; amid the manifold claims of modem 
culture that could only have ended in a thin, one- 
sided growth. Goethe's Hellenism was of another 



VIII. WINGKELMANN, 203 

» 

order, the Allgemeinheit and Heiterkeit, the com- 
pleteness and serenity of a watchful, exigent intel- 
lectualism. Im Ganzen^ Guten, WahreUy resolut zu 
leben, is Goethe's description of his own higher life ; 
and what is meant by life in the whole, im Ganzen 1 
It means the life of one for whom, over and over 
again, what was once precious has become indiflferent. 
Every one who aims at the life of culture is met by 
many forms of it, arising out of the intense, laborious, 
one-sided development of some special talent. They 
are the brightest enthusiasms the world has to show. 
They do not care to weigh the claims which this or 
that alien form of culture makes upon them. But 
the pure instinct of self-culture cares not so much to 
reap all that these forms of culture can give, as to 
find in them its own strength. The demand of the 
intellect is to feel itself alive. It must see into the 
laws, the operation, the intellectual reward of every 
divided form of culture ; but only that it may mea- 
sure the relation between itself and them. It strug- 
gles with those forms till its secret is won from each, 
and then lets each fall back into its place in the 
supreme, artistic view of life. With a kind of 
passionate coldness such natures rejoice to be awiay 
from and past their former selves. Above all, they 
are jealous of that abandonment to one special gift 
which really limits their capabilities. It would 



204 THE RENAISSANCE, vni. 

have been easy for Goethe, with the gift of a 
sensuous nature, to let it overgrow him. It is 
easy with the other-worldly gifts to be a schone 
Seele ; but to the large vision of Goethe that seemed 
to be a phase of life that a man might feel all 
round and leave behind him. Again, it is easy to 
indulge the commonplace metaphysical instinct. But 
a taste for metaphysics may be one of those things 
which we must renounce if we mean to mould our 
lives to artistic perfection. Philosophy serves culture 
not by the fancied gift of absolute or transcendental 
knowledge, but by suggesting questions which help 
one to detect the passion and strangeness and dra- 
matic contrasts of life. 

But Goethe's cxilture did not remain * behind the 
veir ; it ever abutted on the practical functions of 
art, on actual production. For him the problem 
came to be — Can the AUgemeinheit and Heiterkeit of 
the antique be communicated to artistic productions 
which contain the fulness of the experience of the 
modem world ? We have seen that the development 
; of the various forms of art has corresponded to the 
'■' development of the thoughts of man concerning 
himself, to the growing relation of the mind to itself. 
Sculpture corresponds to the unperplexed, emphatic 
outlines of Hellenic humanism ; painting to the 
mystic depth and intricacy of the middle age ; 



viTi. WINCKELMANN. 205 

music and poetry have their fortune in the modern 
world. Let us understand by poetry all literary pro- 
duction which attains the power of giving pleasure 
by its form as distinct from its matter. Only in this 
varied literary form can art command that width, 
variety, delicacy of resources, which will enable it 
to deal with v^Jie conditions of modem life. What 
modern art has to^o in the :^r5dce of culture is so to 
rearrange the details of modem life, so to reflect it, 
that it may satisfy the spirit. And what does the 
spirit need in the face of modem life ? The sense of 
freedom. That naive, rough sense of freedom, which 
supposes man's will to be limited, if at all, only by a 
will stronger than his, he can never have again. The 
attempt to represent it * in art would have so little y^/ 
verisimilitude that it would be flat and uninteresting. 
The chief factor in the thoughts of the modem mind 
concerning itself is the intricacy, the imiversality of 
natural law even in the moral order. For us neces- 
sity is not as of old an image without us, with whom 
we can do warfare ; it is a magic web woven through 
and through us, like that magnetic system of which 
modem science speaks, penetrating us with a net- 
work subtler than our subtlest nerves, yet bearing in 
it the central forces of the world. Can art represent 
men and women in these bewildering toils so as to 
give the spirit at least an equivalent for the sense of 



206 THE RENAISSANCE, viii. 

freedom ? Goethe's Wahlverwandtschaften is a high 
instance of modem art dealing thus with modem 
life ; it regards that life as the modem mind must 
regard it, but reflects upon it blitheness and repose. 
Natural laws we shall never modify, embarrass us as 
they may ; but there is still something in the nobler 
or less noble attitude with which we watch their fatal 
combinations. In WcMverwandtschaften this en- 
tanglement, this network of law, becomes a tragic 
situation, in which a group of noble men and women 
work out a supreme denouement. Who, if he fore- 
saw all, would fret against circumstances which 
endow one at the end with so high an experience ? 



CONCLUSION, 



To regard all things and principles of things as 
inconstant modes or fashions has more and more 
become the tendency of modern thought. Let us 
begin with that which is without — our physical life. 
Fix upon it in one of its more exquisite intervals, 
the moment, for instance, of delicious recoil from 
the flood of water in summer heat. What is the 
whole physical life in that moment but a combi- 
nation of natural elements to which science gives 
their names? But these elements, phosphorus and 
lime and delicate fibres, are present not in the 
human body alone : we detect them in places most 
remote from it. Our physical life is a perpetual 
motion of them — the passage of the blood, the 
wasting and repairing of the lenses of the eye, the 
modification of the tissues of the brain by every ray 
of light and soimd — processes which science reduces 
to simpler and more elementary forces. Like the 



208 THE RENAISSANCE. 

elements of which we are composed, the action of 
these forces extends beyond us; it rusts iron and 
ripens com. Far out on every side of us these ele- 
ments are broadcast, driven by many forces; and birth 
and gesture and death and the springing of violets 
from the grave are but a few out of ten thousand 
resulting combinations. That clear perpetual out- 
line of face and limb is but an image of ours under 
which we group them — ^a design in a web, the actual 
threads of which pass out beyond it. This at least 
of flame-like our life has, that it is but the concur- 
rence, renewed from moment to moment, of forces 
parting sooner or later on their ways. 

Or if we begin with the inward world of thought 
and feeling, the whirlpool is still more rapid, the 
flame more eager and devouring. There it is no 
longer the gradual darkening of the eye and fading 
of colour from the wall, — the movement of the shore 
side, where the water flows down indeed, though in 
apparent rest, — but the race of the midstream, a drift 
of momentary acts of sight and passion and thought. 
At first sight experience seems to bury us under a 
flood of external objects, pressing upon us with a 
sharp importunate reality, calling us out of our- 
selves in a thousand forms of action. But when 
reflection begins to act upon those objects they are 
dissipated under its influence ; the cohesive force is 



CONOLUSION, 209 

suspended like a trick of magic ; each object is loosed 
into a group of impressions, — colour, odour, texture, 
— in the mind of the observer. And if we continue 
to dwell on this world, not of objects in the solidity 
with which language invests them, but of impressions 
unstable, flickering, inconsistent, which bum and 
are extinguished with our consciousness of them, it 
contracts still further ; the whole scope of observation 
is dwarfed to the narrow chamber of the individual 
mind. Experience, already reduced to a swarm of 
impressions, is ringed round for each one of us by that 
thick wall of personality through which no real voice 1 1 
has ever pierced on its way to us, or from us to that / 
which we can only conjecture to be without. Every 
one of those impressions is the impression of the 
individual in his isolation, each mind keeping as a 
solitary prisoner its own dream of a world. 

Analysis goes a step further still, and tells us that 
those impressions of the individual to which, for 
each one of us, experience dwindles down, are in 
perpetual flight ; that each of them is limited by 
time, and that as time is infinitely divisible, each 
of them is infinitelv divisible also : all that is 
actual in it being a single moment, gone while we 
try to apprehend it, of which it may ever be more 
truly said that it has ceased to be than that it 
is. To such a tremulous wisp constantly reforming 

p 



210 THE RENAISSANCE, 

itself on the stream, to a single sharp impression, 
with a sense in it, a relic more or less fleeting, 
of such moments gone by, what is real in our life 
fines itself down. It is with the movement, the 
passage and dissolution of impressions, images, 
sensations, that analysis leaves off, — that continual 
vanishing away, that strange perpetual weaving 
and imweaving of ourselves. 

Philosophiren, says Novalis, ist dephlegmatisiren, 
vivificiren. The service of philosophy, and of reli- 
gion and culture as well, to the human spirit, is 
to startle it into a sharp and eagfer observation. 
Eve,7 moment »,m. forTgrows p^-ect in h«>d or 
face ; some tone on the hills or sea is choicer than 
the rest ; some mood of passion or insight or intel- 
lectual excitement is irresistibly real and attractive 
for us, — for that moment only. Not the fruit of 
experience, but experience itself is the end. A 
counted number of pulses only is given to us of 
a variegated, dramatic life. How may we see in 
them all that is to be seen in them by the finest 
senses 1 How can we pass most swiftly fi:om point 
to point, and be present always at the focus where 
the greatest number of vital forces unite in their 
purest energy? 

To bum always with this hard gem-like flame, 
to maintain this ecstasy, is success in life. Failure 



CONCLUSION. 211 

is to form habits; for habit is relative to a stereo- 
typed world ; meantime it is only the roughness fi/ 
of the eye that makes any two persons, things, / 
situations, seem alike. While all melts imder our 
feet, we may well catch at any exquisite passion, 
or any contribution to knowledge that seems, by a 
lifted horizon, to set the spirit free for a moment, 
or any stirring of the senses, strange dyes, strange 
flowers, and curious odours, or work of the artist's 
hands, or the face of one's friend. Not to discri- 
minate every moment some passionate attitude in 
those about us, and in the brilliance of their gifts 
some tragic dividing of forces on their ways is, on 
this short day of frost and sun, to sleep before 
evening. With this sense of the splendour of our 
experience and of its awful brevity, gathering all 
we are into one desperate effort to see and touch, 
we shall hardly have time to make theories about 
the things we see and touch. What we have to 
do is to be for ever curiously testing new opinions 
and courting new impressions, never acquiescing in 
a facile orthodoxy of Comte or of Hegel, or of our 
own. Theories, religious or philosophical ideas, as 
points of view, instruments of criticism, may help 
us to gather up what might otherwise pass unre- 
garded by us. La philosophie, c'est la microscope 
de la pensSe. The theory, or idea, or system, which 

p 2 



212 THE RENAISSANCE. 

requires of us the sacrifice of any part of this ex- 
perience, in consideration of some interest into which 
we cannot enter, or some abstract morality we have 
not identified with ourselves, or what is only con- 
ventional, has no real claim upon us. 

One of the most beautiftil places in the writings 
of Rousseau is that in the sixth book of the * Confes- 
sions,' where he describes the awakening in him of 
the literary sense. An undefinable taint of death 
had always clung about him, and now in early man- 
hood he believed himself stricken by mortal disease. 
He asked himself how he might make as much as 
possible of the interval that remained ; and he was 

(\not biassed by anything in his previous life when 
he decided that it must be by intellectual excite- 
ment, which he found in the clear, fresh writings 
of Voltaire. Well, we are all condamnSs, as Victor 
Hugo says : les hommes sont tons condamnes a morte 
avec des sursis indSJmis : we have an interval, and 
then our place knows us no more. Some spend this 
. interval in listlessness, some in high passions, the 

< wisest in art and song. For our one chance is in ex- 
panding that interval, in getting as many pulsations 
as possible into the given time. High passions give 
one this quickened sense of life, ecstasy and sorrow 
of love, political or religious enthusiasm, or the 
* enthusiasm of humanity.' Only, be sure it is 



CONCLUSION. 213 

passion, that it does yield you this fruit of a 
quickened, multiplied consciousness. Of this wis- 
dom, the poetic passion, the desire of beauty, the 
love of art for art's sake has most ; for art comes 
to you professing frankly to give nothing but 
the* highest quality to your moments as they 
pass, and simply for those moments' sake. 



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